ucla palestine protest
UCLA Pro-Palestine Protest - Photo courtesy of Ringo Chiu on Shutterstock

A group of UCLA students and community members is suing the California Highway Patrol, the Los Angeles Police Department and dozens of unidentified employees from both agencies over law officers’ alleged “violent attack” on participants in a pro-Palestine encampment at UCLA last spring, according to court papers obtained Monday.

According to the lawsuit, hundreds of riot-clad law enforcement agents from CHP, LAPD and other agencies engaged in a joint operation to attack and clear the UCLA Palestine Solidarity Encampment on May 1-2 last year, tearing down the encampment walls and striking those gathered inside with batons and “less lethal” rubber bullets allegedly fired directly into the crowd.

Plaintiffs including Abdullah Puckett, a PhD candidate at UCLA, and David Ramirez, a self-employed architectural designer, contend they were subjected to unlawful force and shot with rubber or foam bullets at the encampment. Kira Layton, an undergraduate art student at UCLA, and Juliana Islam Hawari-Vogenpoohl, a college student studying to become a teacher, also allege they were subjected to unlawful force and shot with projectiles at the protest.

Photos filed last Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court as part of the 28-page complaint for damages show the plaintiffs with head and body injuries. The plaintiffs contend they suffered “severe injuries” causing “intense and prolonged pain” and continue to deal with “mental and emotional distress” following the chaotic events last spring on the UCLA campus.

A message sent to CHP seeking comment was not immediately answered. An LAPD representative said the department does not comment on pending litigation.

UCLA students launched the campus “Palestine solidarity encampment” in front of Royce Hall to protest Israel’s war in Gaza and what the students contend are the university’s financial dealings with Israel. The suit alleges that the students themselves, with the support of university faculty, staff, and administration, comprised a multi-racial and multi-ethnic group of Muslims, Jews, Christians, atheists and others.

Both UCLA and USC experienced extensive pro-Palestinian protests last year in relation to the Israel-Hamas war sparked by the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel. The massive pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA was one of the largest campus protests of its type in the country.

The pro-Palestine encampment that grew in the center of campus in mid-April last year was attacked by counter-protesters and sparked hours of violence. Hundreds of police eventually descended on the campus and forcefully dismantled the encampment, making 209 arrests.

That was followed by a congressional inquiry into the campus’ response to antisemitism, lawsuits accusing the university of failing to protect Jewish students and accusations by protesters of excessive force by campus police and interference with free-speech rights.

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