18 businesses damaged after May Day protest in Santa Cruz, Calif., turns violent
By John S. Marshall, APSunday, May 2, 2010
18 businesses damaged in Calif. May Day protest
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — Close to 20 businesses were damaged after a May Day protest in downtown Santa Cruz turned violent, requiring police to call other agencies for help, authorities said.
Police spokesman Zach Friend said an estimated 250 people started marching through the city around 10:30 p.m. Saturday.
It was a peaceful but “unpermitted and unsanctioned event,” he said, until some in the crowd started breaking windows and spraying paint on retail shops that line the downtown corridor.
A fire was started in a coffee shop entryway but was extinguished once police cleared the way for firefighters, Friend said.
Eighteen businesses were damaged, with the cost of repairs estimated at between $50,000 and $100,000. No injuries were reported.
Friend said he wasn’t sure if the damage was caused by people marching in support of immigrants’ rights, or if the group had been “infiltrated by anarchists.”
Anarchy signs were spray-painted on some of the buildings.
“They’re a group of people who seem to fancy themselves as revolutionaries, but what they really are are a group of morons,” Friend said.
Once officers arrived from other agencies, police were able to restore order in about 20 minutes, he said.
One person was arrested on suspicion of committing vandalism, though police expect to make additional arrests once investigators have a chance to gather video of the event.
“I assure you, more people will be held accountable for this as we review videos,” Friend said.