Day Seven
Occupy Houston and the police aren't so friendly anymore: Arrests follow tentdispute as tension builds
Occupy Houston began as a rambunctious group of friendly protesters, but their good relationship with the Houston Police Department became strained when officers took away their tents on Monday.
The group had more clashes with the law on Wednesday, when President Obama's ill-fated American Jobs Act failed in the Senate. That was the final straw.
Members of other groups, Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and Good Jobs, Great Houston, mobilized in frustration after hearing news of the bill's demise. Some occupiers left their post at City Hall and joined in with the 200 dissidents at the George Thomas "Mickey" Leland Federal Building — the location of Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison's Houston offices — to "sit in" in protest.
This act of civil disobedience was not well-received.
When the protesters refused to budge, the police department made arrests, deploying 50 officers to do it. Eight people total were arrested for criminal trespassing according to the Houston Police Department, and Occupy Houston claims that three of those currently detained are from their own ranks.