Elena L. Cohen, president of the National Lawyers Guild’s (NLG) New York City chapter, was also at Wednesday’s protest in New York and reports that there were 135 confirmed arrests, including media, NLG lawyers, and others who “did not consider themselves arrestable” from 7:30pm to 1am.

The arrests caused “a significant amount of injuries… They were really violent, really rough,” Cohen told Common Dreams by phone. The heavy law enforcement presence was likely “an intense overreaction” to protests and so-called “rioting” in Baltimore, she added, noting that there was a “really big change in the feeling” of the hands-on police response compared to other recent actions.

Meanwhile, the Denver Post reports that a protest in downtown Denver, attended by about 100 people, turned violent and police used force and pepper spray on demonstrators, resulting in 11 arrests. 

And the protests go on.

In just one example, organizers with the Chicago Unity Coalition for Justice—the group behind the December 12, 2014 Black Lives Matter protest in that city—are calling for supporters to join a group of elementary school students, along with their parents and teachers, for a solidarity rally on Friday at 8:30am.

According to the Baltimore Sun, Malik Shabazz, the Washington, D.C.-based lawyer who helped plan protests that began peacefully but ended in violence Saturday in Baltimore, announced Tuesday that  another, even larger rally would take place this Saturday.

The Sun reports: “Shabazz said the ‘massive national rally’ would address ‘the burn behind the burn’—the anger over social disparities and injustice that he suggested led to Monday night’s unrest.”

Also Wednesday, the Baltimore Police Department was forced to release about half the detainees who had been arrested during that unrest. More than 100 of those detained in connection with the protests and ensuing conflict were released without charges, and many reported poor conditions and lack of due process while they were in custody.

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