The notoriously racist Los Angeles police trained Genoa police. Forward Reuters
Genoa Police Unit Trained by LAPD > >Tue Aug 07 2001 > > > >ROME (Reuters) - An elite Italian police unit which carried out a > >bloody raid against protesters at a Group of Eight summit in Genoa > >was trained by U.S. police chiefs, an Italian > newspaper reported > >Tuesday. > > > >For four months, 70 specially selected officers > were trained by two > >Los Angeles police sheriffs. A larger number of > police also received > >a week-long training course from the Americans, > according to the > >Communist daily Liberazione. > > > >"The prime responsibility of the two Los Angeles sheriffs was to > >train the men from the special unit in the use of American aluminum > >batons," an unidentified policeman who took part in the one-week > >course was quoted as saying. > > > >"From the start, they openly criticized the way in which Italian > >police carry out public order," he said. > > > >Not only is the use of foreign expertise likely to > cause consternation, but the fact the officers came from > Los Angeles, a > >city scarred by mass riots in 1992 following the police beating of > >black motorist Rodney King, also raises serious > questions. > > > >In a midnight assault on a school which was acting as > a headquarters > >for protest groups during the July 20-22 summit, 62 > people were > >injured and 93 arrested. Many were laid out on > stretchers with blood- > >stained faces. > > > >Reporters who entered the school soon afterwards saw > blood stains on > >the walls and broken teeth scattered on the floor. > At least one > >protester has since undergone brain surgery. > > > >Allegations of police brutality have flooded in and three top police > >officials have been transferred by the interior > minister, who has > >faced calls for his own resignation. > > > >The Interior Ministry declined to make a comment at > this time on the > >involvement of the American sheriffs. > > > >As well as brutality, there were also allegations that police > >sexually assaulted female protesters. Two weeks > after the summit, > >nearly 50 demonstrators are still in prison. Many say > their human and > >civil rights have been violated. > > > >The police source told the paper the American > sheriffs had said > >repeatedly that "in Los Angeles all we need is a nucleus of 20 cops > >to disperse hundreds of demonstrators because we can > fire rubber > >bullets which wound, but don't kill." > > > >On the first day of the Genoa summit, a 23-year-old > protester who was > >attacking a police vehicle was shot and killed by an Italian > >paramilitary policeman. > > > >The source also said that the week-long course he had been assigned > >to was more like a military boot camp. > > > >"We marched, learned how to form shield defenses > and how to jump > >through fire or out of a moving vehicle," he said. > > > >"It was more like a medieval tournament. In the end > we were doing > >purely military training. There seemed no > difference between police > >officers and soldiers."
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