Sell vehicles towed during protest to cover city's costs, says Watson
CBC
Ottawa's mayor says any vehicles seized during the police crackdown on the occupation of the downtown should be sold to cover costs incurred by the city.
"We actually have the ability to confiscate those vehicles and sell them," Mayor Jim Watson said Saturday.
"And I want to see them sold. I don't want the return to these people who've been causing such frustration and angst in our community."
The mayor told CBC News that Ottawa has that power due to the Emergencies Act, which was invoked by the federal government last week.
Watson said he's been pleased by the level of professionalism shown by law enforcement since officers began stepping up their efforts Friday to clear the protest. But he also said he worries about demonstrators who have been "taunting police, being completely irresponsible, and don't want to seem to leave."
Police officers from several forces across the country retook Wellington Street from protesters Saturday, clearing the crowd around the National War Memorial, herding them away from the parliamentary precinct and then down O'Connor Street.
As of Saturday afternoon, 47 more people had been arrested, bringing the overall total to 170. Dozens of vehicles have also been towed.
On Saturday evening, hundreds of protesters pooled at the corner of Bank and Sparks streets, with a line of officers standing firm.
They were eventually moved south, closer to Queen Street. By 10 p.m., the crowd had significantly thinned out, with fencing installed in the area.
"As night falls, it is unsafe to stay," Ottawa police tweeted on Saturday. "Get out of the cold and cease further unlawful activity."
East of downtown, protesters could be seen taking down part of the supply camp they'd set up in a Coventry Road parking lot next to the city-run baseball stadium.
By evening, much of the camp was gone, although some protesters told CBC they planned to regroup elsewhere.
Meanwhile, police said emergency phone lines had been flooded by calls with complaints about the operations underway downtown.
Zexi Li, an Ottawa resident who helped launch a class-action lawsuit against the convoy organizers, said the weekend's action has been sorely needed as many residents have been distressed for weeks.
A disgraced real-estate lawyer who this week admitted to pilfering millions in client money to support her and her family's lavish lifestyle was handcuffed in a Toronto courtroom Friday afternoon and marched out by a constable to serve a 20-day sentence for contempt of court, as her husband and mother watched.