An LAPD car on fire while people watch it burn.

Gregory Johnson Jr./Shutterstock (Licensed)

Audio allegedly captured violent anti-protester comments—and people think it was the police

The LAPD denies the accusations.

 

Michelle Brandabur

IRL

Posted on Mar 26, 2021   Updated on Mar 26, 2021, 7:53 pm CDT

After a turbulent night of police clashing with protesters in Los Angeles, social media users accused Los Angeles Police Department officers of joking about pouring gas on an area of the city. The department denies the accusation.

Featured Video Hide

The People’s City Council of Los Angeles, a coalition of social and climate justice organizations, tweeted a video of helicopters allegedly flying over accompanied by audio from a radio scanner allegedly recorded during protests in Echo Park Lake. “This is nazi shit,” the tweet said.

Advertisement Hide

The video, which was posted Thursday, already has 856,000 views, more than 8,300, retweets, and 12,900 likes.

https://twitter.com/PplsCityCouncil/status/1375173014136877058

In the video, two people appear to discuss the protesters below as they fly over the area.

Advertisement Hide

“Great when they put the fuel dumps on these helicopters,” one man says. “I would have dumped it on Glendale Boulevard a long time ago.”

“I’ll bring the match,” a second man replies.

There’s laughing in the background as the men joke about setting the area on fire.

Officials for the LAPD, however, deny that the men in the clip are police officers in its department.

Advertisement Hide

“It has been confirmed that they are NOT employees of the LAPD,” Captain Stacy Spell said in a video posted to Twitter on Thursday. Some commenters suggested that news crew members, not police officers, made the comments on the air.

Police were in Echo Park Lake on Thursday night to remove a homeless encampment in the area. Officers said they offered unhoused people rooms in downtown hotels.

Advertisement Hide

As helicopters circled overhead, one person spoke over a megaphone alerting residents that anyone who remained in the enclosed area of the park would be subject to arrest, according to the Los Angeles Times.

More than 150 people showed up at the protest to support unhoused people’s right to camp in the park and encourage the city to handle the homeless situation productively. The protesters were met with a large force of LAPD in riot gear.

Users on Twitter were appalled by the video and audio of the helicopter crew members. Many believed that despite the department’s statement, the voices were those of police officers.

Other commenters criticized the police’s efforts to remove unhoused people from the park.

Advertisement Hide

“This was handled poorly,” one user tweeted. “The irony of needing to displace those without homes in order to do a $600k upgrade to the park. Use the money to help people get on their feet.”

Protesters said online that their peaceful congregation was met with violence and guns drawn by the police. One protester showed pictures of his arm that he said was broken during the protest.

“Can confirm that a baton-wielding cop broke my arm last night,” the user tweeted. 

https://twitter.com/isaacscher/status/1375132620724391939
Advertisement Hide

Must-reads on the Daily Dot

An autistic TikToker reported an ableist sound that trivializes sexual assault 4 times. It’s still wildly popular
Police say ‘computer-generated voice’ behind swatting attempt of Marjorie Taylor Greene
‘AI cannot be an excuse’: What happens when Meta’s chatbot brands a college professor a terrorist?
Sign up to receive the Daily Dot’s Internet Insider newsletter for urgent news from the frontline of online.

Share this article
*First Published: Mar 26, 2021, 6:09 pm CDT
 

Featured Local Savings

Exit mobile version