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Harvard Police Assist in Responding to Anti-ICE Protesters at Amazon Office

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Harvard University Police Department assisted Cambridge police officers as they arrested 12 protesters on trespassing charges at Amazon’s Kendall Square office Thursday evening, according to Cambridge Police Department spokesperson Jeremy Warnick.

The protest, organized by Jewish activist group Never Again Action, drew hundreds condemning Amazon’s business ties with United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The group has organized similar protests around the country aimed at forcing various businesses to sever their ties with ICE.

Amazon and similar companies have faced criticism due to their business relationships with federal law enforcement agencies like ICE, which are responsible for implementing the Trump administration’s “zero-tolerance” immigration policy.

Amazon’s public relations office did not immediately respond to a request for comment early Friday morning.

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Warnick wrote in an email Thursday night that both Harvard and MIT police provided “mutual aid” due to the volume of protesters.

“The mutual aid was primarily due to the volume of people involved in the protest (approximately 300) and the possibility of extended traffic impacts if the protestors continued further into the city,” Warnick wrote in an email.

HUPD occasionally collaborates with other local police departments to ensure “the most appropriate response” to incidents adjacent to campus, according to its annual security report.

HUPD spokesperson Steven G. Catalano and MIT’s public affairs office did not immediately respond to requests for comment Thursday night.

Warnick added that officers attempted to escort the protesters from Amazon’s premises without making arrests.

“This followed multiple attempts to peacefully escort the protestors outside the Amazon building without having to proceed with making arrests,” Warnick wrote.

Harvard affiliates were involved in the protest, but it is unclear if any were among those arrested because CPD has yet to release their names and ages. Warnick added that the agency will do so after they book arrested protesters.

The protestors marched from the New England Holocaust Memorial in Boston to the Kendall Square office, where they crowded in the lobby bearing signs with slogans like “#NoTechForICE.”

Never Again Action member Blair Nodelman said her group targeted the Amazon location because of the company’s role in supporting ICE’s infrastructure.

“The reason that we are targeting Amazon in particular is that their software and their capabilities are being pulled to ICE to make it operate quicker and more effectively, in deporting and detaining immigrants and asylum seekers,” Nodelman said.

—Staff writer Shera S. Avi-Yonah can be reached at shera.avi-yonah@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter at @saviyonah.

—Staff writer Delano R. Franklin can be reached at delano.franklin@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter at @delanofranklin_.

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