Center protest gets tense
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Lauren Vane
What was advertised as a protest against illegal immigration and city
funding of the Laguna Beach Job Center took a different turn when a
group described as white supremacists began waving Nazi flags
Saturday along Laguna Canyon Road.
Police monitored the event, confiscating mace and an illegal knife
from one protester, Capt. Danell Adams said. Police were prepared to
call for backup from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department when the
protest subsided, Adams said.
“They seem to be more interested in fighting and creating havoc
than they are addressing the issue,” Adams said of the flag-waving
protesters.
Police received information prior to Saturday’s event from the
Anti-Defamation League that white supremacists were planning to
attend, Adams said.
Information about Saturday’s protest was posted on the website of
Save Our State, an activist group against illegal immigration that
was responsible for organizing the protest held more than a week ago
at the same location.
Adams estimated that 150 people were demonstrating at the height
of activity Saturday.
Laguna Beach resident Eileen Garcia, an organizer of a previous
demonstration, said those waving Nazi flags were not affiliated with
the organizers of the initial protest.
“It gained a lot of attention, and all of these other groups have
now jumped on the bandwagon,” Garcia said. “Not one single one of our
people were at this protest.”
Protesters preaching messages of racial intolerance derail focus
from the original issue -- protesting community assistance funds
going toward the job center, Garcia said.
David Peck, chairman of the Cross-Cultural Council, a volunteer
group that oversees the day laborer center, said he has mixed
feelings about the protests.
It’s healthy for the community to debate the issue of immigration
but not when racial intolerance becomes a factor, Peck said.
“This is a kind of flashpoint issue that mobilizes people on both
sides,” Peck said.
One group, though, has taken it too far, Peck said. Someone has
been calling the job center’s cellphone and harassing anyone who
answers with demeaning racial comments, he said.
The calls began several weeks ago, and at one point, the site was
receiving up to 35 calls a day, Peck said.
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