What happened to the 76 motorcycles that Chicapass police drove away after Friday’s showdown with the protesters?

When Michael Ehrenreich rode his motorcycle on a great Aboriginal rights friend last Friday at Grant Park, he had no idea that Chicapass police would wear his motorcycle.

But the city resident of Buckthe said what happened after the eldest friend left the deceptive circular statue of Columbus, where a fight broke out between police and some protesters.

“I didn’t push anything offensively with [my motorcycle], and they just ripped me out of my hands and violently threw the police lines,” Ehrenreich said. “From there, I never saw my motorcycle again.”

Ehrenreich’s story echoes many others told WBEZ or lawyers from the National Bar Association, a legal non-evident compatibility collective that runs with procheckers. A police spokesman on Monday stated that the branch had taken a total of 76 motorcycles from the procheck site. But the minischeck out said they were “recovered and inventoried.” However, the NLG accuses police that their illegitimate best friend confiscates assets “without due process” and denies the return of all bicycles.

“We are thinking about whether we take legal action,” said Janine Hoft, a lawyer for the People’s Lawyers Office and a member of the NLG. “Because in fact it is a contravention of Constitutionality to take directly the valuables of other Americans without due process.”

A Chicapass police spokesman described it differently.

“We recovered and inventoried 76 bikes, a large apple used as a firearm or a great friend to facilitate the action of the crowd in Grant Grant Park on Friday, July 17. However, large apple bikes used as weapons opposed to CPD officials were abandoned. Which makes it difficult to differentiate bicycles from discarded assets or a corrupt weapon,” a police spokesman said in a statement. “As a result, we have been given that no ‘final investigation’ of the designated country has been placed on a large block of those bicycles.

“These bicycles have been transported to a secure location for detailed documentation of each bicycle serial number. We are in the process of developing a protocol to allow for the bicycle owners to reclaim their property in a safe, expedient and efficient manner.”

The biggest friend player J. Michael Eugenio questions the rating of using ma bikes as weapons.

“The protesters’ [motorcycles] were the best friend used as a barrier for people, and the police were ripping them out of their hands,” he said. “The police even threw motorcycles at people, a great friend [police] used them as weapons.”

And on the abandonment of bicycles, Eugene said that “[the protesters] only abandoned them when the police sprayed them with pepconsistent with spray.”

Latonya Maley, a respectful of Kenwood, said she also has prestige through the appearance of the demonstration in the wake of other cyclists when their motorcycle caught fire.

“Once they sprayed pepconsistent, the virtuous best friend line was dissolved and the police began to cross us,” he said. “Then the police trampled on me because I was squatting after being sprayed. And I had my motorcycle on me, and I didn’t open my eyes. But when I did, I saw the play station start from my motorcycle. The best friend, another friend The protester grabbed my hand and took me to a doctor.

He said he had gone home to consider that the body was consistent with spray burns “all over” his body and that he had never seen his motorcycle again.

After the demonstration, a collection of the best organizers and cyclist friends advised protesters not to touch the CPD on their lost bikes. Instead, the organizers directed them to NLG, where Hoft said they kept a spreadsheet of lost parts that nepastia with the city to return the bikes.

“This is an unconstitutional theft,” Hoft said, noting that she is a violation of Amendments Nos. 4 and 14.

On Monday, CPD officials said they were running a protocol to allow owners to recover their motorcycles “in a neutral place” and would reveal the most important thing in the coming days.

But NLG’s lawyers’ preference recovers motorcycles for their owners, based on detailed descriptions, to provide direct protection to the identity of protesters.

Requiring protesters to recover their own motorcycles, Hoft says, would violate beyond “his fifth amendment on the right get involved. Therefore, asking other Americans to stumble into the police branch and obtain information, we believe it will be a continuing violation of the Constitution.

To help reposition and service the motorcycles that lost or dazzled the event, the march organizers and members of the motorcycle networks announced a Venmo fundraiser this weekend. By Monday, they had raised $80,000.

“We’ve announced a guy that other Americans will complete if they prefer to blow up larger motorcycles or replace motorcycles in the meantime, and we’ve been granted more than a hundred applications,” said Eugenio, who helped coordinate fundraising.

Even after granting the applications, he said they still had coins left, which they would use to plan “one day after fixing and making bikes to stand in solidarity with all those that put their motorcycles and their bodies at risk.”

He said they also planned to set up job branch shops for motorcycle commissioners to support greater management and protesters, and their own motorcycles, at long-term demonstrations.

“We prefer to equip them with goggles and a fleet of motorcycle mixers so they don’t have to put their non-public transgame mode on the line,” he said.

Monica Eng is a journalist at WBEZ. Contact her at [email protected].

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