
Denver ICE Protests Draw Over 1,000 as Police Use Tear Gas
Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Denver Tuesday in a wave of emergency rallies called by immigration supporters to protest federal deportation efforts, culminating in the use of chemical weapons by police on demonstrators in the area of Interstate 25.
Immigration rights groups had called on people to take to the streets in response to heightening ICE enforcement actions across the country, and more than 1,000 activists gathered at the Colorado State Capitol grounds Tuesday evening. The Party for Socialism and Liberation co-sponsored (with the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition) the ICE Out protest.
Speakers discussed the increased fears among the immigrant communities, with the federal agents increasing the scope of operations outside the conventional enforcement patterns. Nayda Benitez of the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition underlined the individual stakes that the families across the region have.
Denver ICE Protests Turn Confrontational Downtown
A large segment of the demonstrators left the main Capitol group and created a moving protest that traveled through Denver streets. The split faction, which was mainly composed of younger activists, was able to block several intersections on Broadway and Lincoln Street and chant anti-school slogans.
The site of the protests caused traffic chaos across the downtown corridor, with the protesters holding their ground at some major intersections. In spite of the inconvenience, a lot of motorists expressed support by honking and shouting words of encouragement through vehicle windows.
Business owners in the path of the protest manifested a reaction of varied feelings, with some businesses giving them moral support and others fearing the possible effects it may have on evening business activities.
Police Deploy Chemical Munitions Against Denver Protesters
The confrontation between law enforcers and the protesters heightened as the protesters went to the vicinity of the Broadway-Interstate 25 interchange. Colorado State Patrol troopers linked up with the Denver police to form a defensive perimeter with tactical and riot control gear.
Police gave several warnings over loudspeaker systems, requiring demonstrators to leave the access points of the highways, threatening to use chemical weapons to control the crowd. The confrontation lasted about half an hour when the police increased their response.
Policemen discharged a few rounds of pepper ball ammo and released numerous tear gas canisters to clear the rest of the demonstrators. The chemical weapons caused the demonstrators to go north along Broadway, whereas the police moved forward.
The officials of the Denver Police Department announced that there were no arrests related to the Tuesday evening demonstrations, although the end of the protest actions was aggressive.
Immigration Enforcement Sparks Nationwide Denver ICE Protests
The Denver protests are one of the elements of the nationwide opposition to increased immigration enforcement initiatives. The activity of ICE has become much more aggressive than before, as agents are currently making arrests even at the federal immigration courts, which used to promote participation in the legal proceedings in the past.
The raids at the workplaces in recent times at restaurants and retail outlets have caused a lot of apprehension in the communities of immigrant origin. Federal enforcement data show that the demographics of detention have shifted significantly, and the people without criminal history have become almost a quarter of ICE detainees, as compared to 6 percent back in early this year.
Los Angeles is going through the fifth day of protests of the same nature, which forced Mayor Karen Bass to institute curfew measures in the evening hours. The federal government has responded by sending 700 Marines and thousands of National Guard soldiers to deal with the continuing protests, the first such deployment since 1965.