@'Racist' police blocked bridge and forced evacuees back at
gunpoint
@By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
@Published: 11 September 2005
@
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article311784.ece
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A Louisiana police chief has admitted that he ordered his
officers to block a bridge over the Mississippi river and force
escaping evacuees back into the chaos and danger of New Orleans.
Witnesses said the officers fired their guns above the heads of
the terrified people to drive them back and "protect" their own
suburbs.
Two paramedics who were attending a conference in the city and
then stayed to help those affected by the hurricane, said the
officers told them they did not want their community "becoming
another New Orleans".
The desperate evacuees were forced to trudge back into the city
they had just left. "It was a real eye-opener," Larry Bradshaw,
49, a paramedic from San Francisco, told The Independent on
Sunday. "I believe it was racism. It was callousness, it was
cruelty."
Mr Bradshaw said the police blocked off the road on the Thursday
and Friday after Hurricane Katrina struck on Monday 29 August.
He and his wife Lorrie Slonsky, also a paramedic, had sheltered
with others in the Hotel Monteleone in the French Quarter.
When food and water ran out they were forced to head for the
city's convention centre, but on the way they heard reports of
the chaos and violence that was taking place there and inside
the Superdome where thousands of people were forced together
without running water, toilets, electricity or air conditioning.
So Mr Bradshaw spoke with a senior New Orleans police officer
who instructed them to cross the Crescent City Connection bridge
to Jefferson Parish, where he promised they would find buses
waiting to evacuate them.
They were in the middle of a group of up to 800 people -
overwhelmingly black - walking across the bridge when they heard
shots and saw people running. "We had been hearing shooting for
days. What was different about this was that it was close by,"
he said.
Making their way towards the crest of the bridge they saw a
chain of armed police officers blocking the route. When they
asked about the buses they were told their was no such
arrangement and that the route was being blocked to avoid their
parish becoming "another New Orleans". They identified the
police as officers from the city of Gretna.
The following day Mr Bradshaw said they tried again to cross and
directly witnessed police shooting over the heads of a
middle-aged white couple who were also turned back. Eventually,
late on Friday evening, the couple succeeded in crossing the
bridge with the intervention of a contact in the local fire
department.
Arthur Lawson, chief of the Gretna police department, said he
had not yet questioned his officers as to whether they fired
their guns.
He confirmed that his officers, along with those from Jefferson
Parish and the Crescent City Connection police force, sealed the
bridge and refused to let people pass. This was despite the fact
that local media were informing people that the bridge was one
of the few safe evacuation routes from the city.
Gretna is a predominantly white suburban town of around 18,000
inhabitants. In the aftermath of Katrina, three quarters of the
inhabitants still had electricity and running water. But, Chief
Lawson told UPI news agency: "There was no food, water or
shelter in Gretna City. We did not have the wherewithal to deal
with these people. If we had opened the bridge our city would
have looked like New Orleans does now - looted, burned and
pillaged."
Mr Bradshaw and his wife were evacuated to Texas and have since
returned to California. They condemned the authorities, adding:
"This official treatment was in sharp contrast to the warm,
heartfelt reception given to us by ordinary Texans.
"Throughout, the official relief effort was callous, inept and
racist... Lives were lost that did not need to be lost."