Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

1967 Riots on Sunset Strip

LAPD were on a mission to enforce CURFEW on Sunset Strip 
Demonstrators were on a mission to "Free the Strip. End Police brutality and free Huey Newton. No more murder of Black People".


1967 College Students and mostly high school students ran demonstrations, carrying signage that reads "Stop Blue Facism", "Abolish the Curfew", and "Free the Strip". 

Demonstration had been called by RANCOM (the Right of Assembly and Movement Committee) headquartered in Fifth Estate Coffeehouse on Sunset. AL MITCHELL (coffee house manager) was a spokesperson for the high school students/ teenaged runaways that would congregate at the coffeehouse and Pandora's Box. This was a series of happenings protesting a policing campaign to clear the strip of "loitering" teenagers.

Cops custom response to these demonstrations was to "humiliate curfew violators with insults and obscene jokes, pull their long hair, brave them against squad cars, and even choke them with billy clubs, before hauling them down to the West Hollywood Sheriff's or the Hollywoo Police stations - where they would be held until their angry parents picked them up" - Set the Night on Fire LA in the Sixties

Event of December 10, 1967 - demonstration was peaceful and finished up at Pandora's - Al Mitchell declared demonstration/ protest over... and as the crowd began to disperse, LAPD showed up. Eason MONROE (head of Southern California's ACLU) complained that police were acting illegally. Cops responding by arresting Monroe... Michael Vossi (Beach Boys PR agent) challenged police and he was pummeled.
Remaining demonstrators started shouting at police to leave the adult supporters alone. RIOT EQUIPPED police reinforcements converged from all over. 

From peaceful to MASSACRE
Paul Jay Robbing described the attacks (From Set the Night on Fire LA in the Sixties):
"I saw a kid holding a sign in both hands jerk forward as though truck from behind. He fell into the path of the officers and four or five of them immediately began bludgeoning him with clubs held in one hand. I stood transfixed watching him as the officers continued beating him while he attempted to alternately protect himself and crawl forward. Finally he slumped against a wall as the officer continued to beat him. Before I was spun around and set reeling forward again, I saw him picked up, belly-down, by the officers and carried away. Later legal representatives of CAFF measured a trail of blood 75 yards long leading from this spot to the point where he was placed in a car. Where is he now?" 

From 1967 - 1968 - thousands of kids would be arrested for curfew violations

MOST CELEBRATED EPISODE of the STRUGGLE - "Battle of the Strip" - teenagers of all colors were trying to create "their own realm of freedom and carnivalesque sociality within the Southern California night.

Black and Chicano flower children were beginning to integrate the Strip in small numbers, despite frequent racist treatment from club bouncers and, of course, cops; and some Black leaders, both moderate and radical, were rallying to the idea, pushed by Al Mitchell and New Left groups, that there really was new ground for a broad, anti-police-abuse coalition. - Set the Night on Fire LA in the Sixties 

 

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