well little Jenny Durkan is finally "woke" to the shitstorm she fucking started by letting the "wokesters" take over downtown Seattle. as anyone else would have known, this was going to devolve into anarchy quickly and it did. 
Seattle will move to dismantle protest zone, mayor says
https://www.yahoo.com/news/another-s...075940848.html
SEATTLE (AP) — Faced with growing pressure to crack down on an  “occupied” protest zone following two weekend shootings, Seattle’s mayor  said Monday that officials will move to wind down the blocks-long span  of city streets taken over two weeks ago that President Donald Trump  asserted is run by “anarchists."
Mayor Jenny Durkan said the  violence was distracting from changes sought by thousands of peaceful  protesters opposing racial inequity and police brutality. She said at a  news conference that the city is working with the community to bring the  “Capitol Hill Occupied Protest” zone, or CHOP, to an end and that  police soon would move back into a precinct building they had largely  abandoned in the area.
Durkan also vowed to address some of the  protesters' demands, including investing more in Black communities,  reimagining policing in cooperation with community leaders, and pushing  for accountability measures and statewide reform of police unions.
The  mayor did not give an immediate timeline for clearing out the  occupation but said “additional steps” would be examined if people don't  leave voluntarily. With scores of people camping in a park in the  protest zone, Durkan said peaceful demonstrations could continue, but  nighttime disorder had to stop.
“The cumulative impacts of the  gatherings and protests and the nighttime atmosphere and violence has  led to increasingly difficult circumstances for our businesses and  residents,” Durkan said. “The impacts have increased and the safety has  decreased.”
A shooting Sunday night was the second in less than 48  hours at the edge of the zone, which is named for the Capitol Hill  neighborhood near downtown Seattle and emerged during nationwide  protests over the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis  police.
The 17-year-old victim was shot in the arm and declined to  speak with detectives, police said. Gunfire early Saturday left a  19-year-old man dead and another person critically wounded.
The  victims were taken to a hospital by volunteer medics in private cars,  and police said they were met by a hostile crowd that prevented them  from immediately getting to the scene.
It was not apparent if the  shootings had anything to do with the protest — gunfire sometimes occurs  in the neighborhood, especially on warm summer nights.
Protesters  cordoned off the several-block area near the police's East Precinct  after Seattle riot squads unleashed tear gas, pepper spray and  flash-bangs on large crowds of mostly peaceful protesters, drawing  condemnation from many city leaders and a federal court order  temporarily banning the use of the weapons on demonstrators.
After  police largely abandoned the building, protesters took over the area —  with demonstrators painting a large “Black Lives Matter” mural on the  street, handing out free food, playing music and planting a community  garden. Its existence incensed Trump, who criticized Durkan and  Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, both Democrats.
Peace has prevailed  during the day. On Monday, people lounged on the turf at a park, while  volunteers handed out food, water and toiletries. Artists painted  designs on wooden barricades, and a few candles burned in front of a  sign on the police building listing people killed by officers.
At night, however, the atmosphere has become more charged, with demonstrators marching and armed volunteer guards keeping watch.
“With  not having a police presence here, people are free to do whatever they  want to do," said Bobby Stills, a Seattle resident who has spent time  volunteering at the protest zone. “You never know who’s going to show  up. That’s why people here are on such high alert — they don’t know  who’s who or what’s what or their intentions.”
Durkan, who has  faced calls from protesters and even some City Council members to resign  over her handling of the demonstrations, and Police Chief Carmen Best  said they did not immediately have a timeline for returning officers to  the East Precinct, which was established to better respond to emergency  calls in the city's historically Black district. They said officers  would return safely and in the near future. Best noted that some other  crimes, including rape, arson and burglary, had been reported in or near  the protest zone.
Demonstrators who had marched to the West  Precinct police building downtown were returning to the zone when Sunday  night's shooting occurred, police said.
Andre Taylor, who founded  of the anti-police-shooting organization Not This Time! after his  brother was killed by Seattle police in 2016, said Monday that he had  warned protest organizers that the city would need to retake the area  because of the violence.
“That CHOP area is attracting this kind  of activity and it's unsafe,” Taylor said in a Facebook video. “I told  them, 'All those people that were supporting you guys, they're going to  start walking away from you, especially all those white people that were  following you. ... They don't want to be associated with any part of  that violence.”
Former U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert, a Republican who  previously served as sheriff in the county where Seattle is located,  also called on the city to take back control.
“Elected officials  have abandoned the rule of law and their oath to protect and defend our  communities,” he wrote in an opinion piece for Washington State Wire, a  website devoted to state political news. “They have abandoned their  law-abiding citizens and have been cowardly bullied into surrendering  the East Precinct – and multiple city blocks.”