SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco police released the names Thursday of 35 people who were arrested during Monday evening's anti-BART protests that led to the closures of two stations and clogged Market Street.
One man, 27-year-old Ryan Ragle of Oakland, was booked into County Jail on suspicion of possessing an incendiary device, a felony, and obstructing a peace officer. He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Wednesday and is being held on $50,000 bail.
Most of the other protesters were cited and released for allegedly failing to comply with peace officers' orders and delaying traffic.
Nearly all of those arrested live in the Bay Area, although four listed out-of-state addresses - two in Portland, Ore., one in Reno and one in Los Lunas, N.M.
Sixteen of those arrested live in San Francisco, eight are Oakland residents and one lives in Berkeley, police said. The ages of those arrested range from 17 to 56.
The protest was directed at the transit agency's cutoff of cell-phone service in underground San Francisco stations Aug. 11. The agency took the step to head off a threatened protest over a BART police officer's fatal shooting of a knife-wielding man.
Ragle was arrested as the protesters marched down Market Street and disrupted traffic. In a jailhouse interview Thursday, he denied that he had been carrying an incendiary device or had resisted arrest. He said his only crime was standing between police and other protesters.
"I feel like they were just making an example of me," Ragle said, adding that all he had done was tell police, " 'Stand down, cops. Let the people say what they want to say.' "
Ragle said police had been unnecessarily rough with him, throwing him to the ground and causing him to hit his head.
In addition to those arrested by San Francisco police, five people were detained by BART officers. Their names have not been released.
About 200 people were involved in the protest at its peak. Most of those arrested were detained in the street outside the Main Library after marching back and forth between BART's Civic Center and Powell Street stations, which the transit agency sporadically closed.
It was the second consecutive Monday evening in which protests led BART to close stations. San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr told The Chronicle on Wednesday that officers' response will be "quicker" for future protests.
Anonymous, the loose-knit online activist movement that has called for the past two protests, said it will demonstrate again Monday at Civic Center Station.
The group's supporters responded to Suhr on Thursday in one of the movement's blogs. A statement by Anonymous supporters alluded to his short-lived indictment in 2003 in the Fajitagate affair and a 2009 reprimand from then-Chief Heather Fong for allegedly not promptly passing along a friend's allegations of domestic violence. "We do not appreciate threats nor do we take well to them, especially from a chief of police who has a very interesting background himself," the statement said.
The list of those arrested Monday can be found at www.sfgate.com/ZLCE.
One man, 27-year-old Ryan Ragle of Oakland, was booked into County Jail on suspicion of possessing an incendiary device, a felony, and obstructing a peace officer. He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Wednesday and is being held on $50,000 bail.
Most of the other protesters were cited and released for allegedly failing to comply with peace officers' orders and delaying traffic.
Nearly all of those arrested live in the Bay Area, although four listed out-of-state addresses - two in Portland, Ore., one in Reno and one in Los Lunas, N.M.
Sixteen of those arrested live in San Francisco, eight are Oakland residents and one lives in Berkeley, police said. The ages of those arrested range from 17 to 56.
The protest was directed at the transit agency's cutoff of cell-phone service in underground San Francisco stations Aug. 11. The agency took the step to head off a threatened protest over a BART police officer's fatal shooting of a knife-wielding man.
Ragle was arrested as the protesters marched down Market Street and disrupted traffic. In a jailhouse interview Thursday, he denied that he had been carrying an incendiary device or had resisted arrest. He said his only crime was standing between police and other protesters.
"I feel like they were just making an example of me," Ragle said, adding that all he had done was tell police, " 'Stand down, cops. Let the people say what they want to say.' "
Ragle said police had been unnecessarily rough with him, throwing him to the ground and causing him to hit his head.
In addition to those arrested by San Francisco police, five people were detained by BART officers. Their names have not been released.
About 200 people were involved in the protest at its peak. Most of those arrested were detained in the street outside the Main Library after marching back and forth between BART's Civic Center and Powell Street stations, which the transit agency sporadically closed.
It was the second consecutive Monday evening in which protests led BART to close stations. San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr told The Chronicle on Wednesday that officers' response will be "quicker" for future protests.
Anonymous, the loose-knit online activist movement that has called for the past two protests, said it will demonstrate again Monday at Civic Center Station.
The group's supporters responded to Suhr on Thursday in one of the movement's blogs. A statement by Anonymous supporters alluded to his short-lived indictment in 2003 in the Fajitagate affair and a 2009 reprimand from then-Chief Heather Fong for allegedly not promptly passing along a friend's allegations of domestic violence. "We do not appreciate threats nor do we take well to them, especially from a chief of police who has a very interesting background himself," the statement said.
The list of those arrested Monday can be found at www.sfgate.com/ZLCE.