Seattle Settles: $10M for 2020 Protesters

Seattle has agreed to pay $10 million to 50 demonstrators who sued over the police department’s heavy-handed response to racial justice protests in 2020, in a settlement announced by attorneys from both sides.
 
The protesters were among tens of thousands who rallied downtown and in the Capitol Hill neighborhood for weeks following the killing of a man by Minneapolis police — a period that saw Seattle’s police department abandon its East Precinct building as well as the establishment of the “Capitol Hill Occupied Protest,” a six-block zone taken over by protesters.
The police department used aggressive techniques to disperse the crowds, including flash-bang grenades, foam-tipped projectiles and blast balls that explode and emit pepper gas.
 
At some points during protests, people in the crowds did cause damage, including burning police cars and trying to set a fire at the East Precint. But a federal judge ordered the department to stop using chemical and other weapons indiscriminately against peaceful demonstrators.
 
When police used tear gas even after the mayor and police head promised they would stop except in life-threatening cases, the City Council voted unanimously to bar officers from using tear gas, pepper spray and several other crowd control devices — a decision that was overturned by a federal judge.
 
Among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit was a woman who was standing in the middle of a street before a phalanx of officers in riot gear when a blast ball hit her in the chest and exploded, causing her to go into cardiac arrest. Volunteer medics and other protesters performed CPR and brought her to a hospital.
 
Others included a teenager whose finger was partially blown off, a disabled veteran with a cane who was tear-gassed and tackled and dozens who suffered hearing loss, broken bones, concussions, severe bruises, PTSD or other injuries, according to the lawsuit.
 
The case involved more than 10,000 videos, including police body-worn camera recordings, and hundreds of witness interviews.


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