Sponsored link
Thursday, November 21, 2024

Sponsored link

News + PoliticsThree who heckled mayor are arrested

Three who heckled mayor are arrested

Unusual charges of trespass and "disturbing a public meeting" for three who interrupted Lee's speech at the Fairmont hotel

UPDATED VERSION Three protesters who interrupted Mayor Ed Lee’s speech at the Fairmont Hotel yesterday were arrested and charged with trespassing and “disturbing a public meeting,” police confirmed today.

Mayor Lee was heckled by protesters, which happens a lot, but this time they were arrested, which is unusual
Mayor Lee was heckled by protesters, which happens a lot, but this time they were arrested, which is unusual

Officer Albie Esparza told me he didn’t immediately have the names of the three, but according to Facebook posts from the Justice for Mario Woods coalition, two of them were Equipto Ilyich Sato and Max LeYoung.

A third protester was charged with disturbing the meeting, which wasn’t public but a private breakfast sponsored by the San Francisco Business Times.

I just got off the phone with Betty Mackey, the third protester, who said she had paid for tickets to the event, and was on her way out the door with Sato and LeYoung when the three were arrested.

The charges are curious: First of all, it’s very rare for hecklers who interrupt a public official to get charged with a crime. It’s also strange to say they were “trespassing,” since they would have needed a ticket to get in (I’ve been to these things, you can’t just show up at the door).

Mackey told me that she had bought four tickets, at a total price of $460. So they weren’t exactly trespassing.

And if disturbing a “public” meeting is a crime now, then the sheriffs who monitor the Board of Supes are going to be awfully busy.

The protesters were there to voice the Woods coalitions demands that the mayor fire Chief Greg Suhr, file charges against the officers who killed Woods, and bring in an independent outside investigator to review the incident.

Lee has consistently supported Suhr, and while he has asked the Justice Department to review police policies on use of force, he has not asked for an investigation into this particular shooting.

Mackey said Sato asked the mayor some questions about homelessness when Fairmont security told him to leave. “We were never trespassing. I was filming it. Max LeYoung never said a word.”

A very polite person from the Business Times asked them to stop interrupting the mayor, and they did, she said. “I was just standing in the back.”

After a few minutes, she said, the three made the decision to leave the room. They were walking out of the hotel when police arrived.

“They told us we had to leave and we were leaving,” she said. “We weren’t doing anything.”

And yet all three were arrested, cuffed, and taken to Central Station, where they were cited and released.

 

 

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.

Sponsored link

Featured

SF Sketchfest recs for every taste and persuasion

Tim Curry, the Groundlings, Found Footage Fest, Tight & Nerdy: As always, the spiraling comedy fest delivers.

The Grammys actually get some things right (and show the Bay a little love)

The often-derided corporate-friendly awards are seeing things a little differently, under the light of a 'New Blue Sun.'

Drama Masks: Surround yourself with family, of whatever kind you choose

Our new stage column reviews 'Jaja's African Hair Braiding,' and 'Lettere d'Amore,' and Left Coast Theatre Co.'s 'Found Family'

More by this author

Lurie’s transition team: The TogetherSF Big Tech crowd is not on the list

Garry Tan, Michael Moritz, Ron Conway, Chris Larson ... so far, they aren't on the inside in this administration. Which can only be a good thing.

The beautiful, transit-friendly Great Highway park: I should live so long

There's no money for improvements or maintenance. What Prop. K got us is a closed road and maybe a few chairs.

A creative new way to save Muni …

... Plus an epidemic of wage theft, cuts in affordable housing fees, and language problems at the SFPD. That's The Agenda for Nov. 17-24
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED