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Denver Police chief says there’s no plan to sweep the Auraria Campus protest again

042724-dg-news-protest (copy)

Denver Police Chief Ron Thomas said at a citizens oversight board meeting on Friday that the police department has no plans to participate in another sweep of the pro-Palestinian encampment on the Auraria Campus.

“We absolutely aren’t going to go in and sweep out this peaceful protest just because they’re occupying a space on your campus that you’d like to use for something else right now and because of your fears that maybe this could grow to the point that it interferes with other campus activities,” Thomas said on Friday that he told Auraria Campus leadership.

The Citizen Oversight Board spoke with Denver Police Department (DPD) Chief Ron Thomas about potential changes to the department's discipline matrix as well as the DPD's partnership with the Auraria Higher Education Campus and the arrests made last week during the sweep of a protest encampment.

Citizen Oversight Board

The demonstration started April 25 with about 100 protesters on the Tivoli Quad. The protesters are calling on the campus universities – Community College of Denver, Metropolitan State University of Denver, and University of Colorado Denver – to divest out of interests in Israel.

Some of them put up tents, which the Auraria Higher Education Center said violates campus policy. Campus administrators spoke with the demonstrators multiple times before law enforcement stepped in, resulting in the arrests of about 40 people last Friday. Auraria Police conducted that operation with support from Denver Police and Denver Sheriff Department.

Since then, no arrests have been made in connection with the protests.

On Friday, during a meeting with the Denver Citizen Oversight Board, Thomas addressed the Auraria Campus encampment and his department’s support of the sweep that happened last Friday.

“My thought was that it would result in a small number of arrests, if any,” he said. “Ultimately that didn’t turn out to be the case.”

'It feels targeted': Jewish student expresses wariness as pro-Palestinian protests spread in Colorado

He said the objective of the sweep was to remove the tents but that Auraria Police left the tents behind.

“As you might imagine, they just came and re-erected the tents and we were back at square one,” Thomas said. “At which point in time they asked us to come back and engage in the operation again, and that’s when I shut it down, said I’m not doing that again.”

He said the crowd had grown significantly larger and he didn’t think it was safe or appropriate to do another sweep. He said that the Auraria Police Department isn’t big enough to deal with the encampment by themselves, so they’re at the “behest” of the Denver Police Department.

“At the end of the day, while the school would prefer the group leave the area, I just don’t think there is any legal way to do that,” he said. “Well, I know there’s no legal way to do that, unless they truly do something that creates an unlawful assembly. And there’s no intelligence at this point to suggest that’s imminent.”

He said that during last Friday’s operation, 40 people were arrested for trespassing and five were arrested for assaulting officers by doing things like throwing water bottles. He said it’s unclear how many are Auraria Campus students and that charges have not been dropped at this time.

Auraria Campus on Thursday said a group of donors would give $15,000 to the international committee of the Red Cross if an encampment of pro-Palestine protesters came down by 5 p.m. Thursday. The protesters refused the offer.

Pro-Palestinian protesters reject Auraria Campus' offer of $15,000 donation to Gaza in exchange for dismantling encampment

Thursday was the eighth day of protests at the campus. An Auraria Campus spokesperson said on Tuesday that campus leaders met with leaders of Students for a Democratic Society “to listen to the group’s perspectives and try to achieve an amicable path forward.”

The leaders said in the letter Thursday that they have “agreed to continue to have set meetings with SDS leadership.”

Auraria Campus spokespeople said they met again Friday. 

Get more on the Auraria Campus protests from our news partners at 9NEWS.


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