Largest Civil Disobedience In Walmart History Leads To More Than 50 Arrests
Surrounded by about 100 police officers in riot gear and a helicopter circling above, more than 50 Walmart workers and supporters were arrested in downtown Los Angeles Thursday night as they sat in the street protesting what they called the retailer's "poverty wages."
Organizers said it was the largest single act of civil disobedience
in Walmart's 50-year history. The 54 arrestees, with about 500
protesting Walmart workers, clergy and supporters, demonstrated outside
LA's Chinatown Walmart. Those who refused police orders to clear the
street after their permit expired were arrested without incident. Those
who fail to post $5,000 bail would be jailed overnight, Detective Gus
Villanueva, a Los Angeles Police Department spokesman, told The
Huffington Post.
Their primary demand to Walmart: pay every full-time worker at least $25,000 a year.
One of the protesting Walmart workers, Anthony Goytia, a 31-year-old
father of two, said he believes he will make about $12,000 this year.
It's a daily struggle, he said, "to make sure my family doesn't go
hungry."
"The power went out at my house yesterday because I couldn't afford
the bill," Goytia told HuffPost. "I had to run around and get two payday
loans to pay for my rent from the first" of the month. "Yesterday we
went to a food bank."
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