At last week's hearing called by St. Paul City Council Member Dave Thune, we heard what's become the standard story line on police conduct during protests at the Republican National Convention. Critics would have us believe that thousands of earnest grandmas -- paragons of Minnesota Nice -- gathered peacefully in St. Paul throughout the convention to exercise their First Amendment rights.
Sure, there were a handful of bad apples -- black-clad anarchists who broke a few store windows. But police should have targeted them and left the peace-loving folks alone, insist critics.
In leftist la-la land, anarchists apparently huddle in little groups, holding high their Molotov cocktails for easy identification while calling out, "Over here, officer. We're the ones you're looking for."
Law enforcement officials have to act in the real world. At a news conference last week, Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher described Sept. 1, the day of the biggest protest march, as "eight hours of chaos and mayhem."
In some cases, police officers found it difficult to distinguish anarchists from other participants in the march, which lawbreakers used as cover, said Fletcher in an interview. Some so-called peaceful protesters hindered police who were seeking to arrest anarchists.
Law enforcement challenges were compounded by the fact that the leaders of the legal march facilitated, and effectively condoned, the anarchist mayhem.
Protest activity at the convention was coordinated by two main groups. The first, an umbrella organization called the Coalition to March on the RNC and Stop the War, organized the legal march on Sept. 1. The second, a self-described anarchist group called the RNC Welcoming Committee, orchestrated the illegal activity and violence.
The coalition didn't explicitly advocate violence. But its leaders operated in coordination with groups that did, and sometimes worked directly with them.