Police Prepare for Protesters at Biotech Conference

By Francie Latour, Boston Globe Staff (Published on 03/04/2000)

 

As the exploding biotech industry gears up for an international

conference later this month at the Hynes Convention Center, Boston

police yesterday said they are also getting ready.

They're bracing for demonstrations by the same protesters who

descended on Seattle for last year's World Trade Organization

conference, leaving $30 million of property damage in their wake.

Two Seattle police officers from those protests wrapped up a

five-day visit to Boston yesterday, meeting with police here to share

cautionary tales from demonstrations of up to 50,000 people each day.

Boston police spokeswomen Margot Hill said the lessons they shared

-- about the strategies used by police and the agitators themselves --

reflected a new era of civil disobedience.

Among the tactics the Seattle officers reported, Hill said, were the

use of supersoaker squirting guns to spray bleach and urine on police and

using olive oil and ball bearings to prevent police from using horses.

"They were very sophisticated in the tactics of police officers and

highly organized in their approach," Hill said.

Boston has not seen large-scale protests since the 1970s with the

first days of court-ordered busing. Since then, tactics-savvy protesters

have studied police maneuvers and refined their strategies.

Police said the Seattle representatives reviewed maps of the city

with police here to target vulnerable areas that could be exploited by

protesters.

Police would not elaborate on those potential targets, or what

preventive strategies the department was planning.

It was unclear how many protesters would take part in the

demonstrations, but Hill said it was unlikely the conference would draw

the huge numbers that wreaked havoc in Seattle.

The biotech conference, which convenes from March 26-30, will touch

on some of the same controversial issues that triggered the massive

protests in Seattle, including the controversial debate over the safety

of genetically modified foods.