Full coverage: 'Occupy' protests
Occupy protestsOn Sept. 17, hundreds of people protested against Wall Street greed in Lower Manhattan and marched up Broadway; about 150 people stayed overnight in Zuccotti Park, a privately owned public space near Wall Street. Since then, while living in the park, the protesters have sponsored rallies and marches on most days — and the movement has thrived. Between 1,000 and 1,500 people have reportedly been arrested in protests across the United States, with the largest numbers in New York, Boston and Chicago. Primer | Timeline
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A year later, Occupy evolves with the times
Occupy protesters may be less confrontational, but their list of grievances remains long and draws from many causes.
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Obama Discusses Economy On Two-Day Campaign Swing Through Virginia
President Obama greets supporters at a campaign event last week in Virginia.
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May Day protesters in downtown Seattle
Protesters break windows of downtown Seattle businesses during a May Day rally Tuesday.
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Goldberg: Obama's tainted bundler
Jon Corzine, the former Goldman Sachs executive, senator and New Jersey governor, seems to embody everything the 99 percenters hate about Wall Street.
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Eviction pushes Occupy protesters in new directions
Activists in L.A. and around the country weigh new strategies to continue momentum after the loss of City Hall and other sites, and a possible end to using camps as a primary tactic.
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To clear Occupy camp, LAPD uses new tactics
Police abandon classic strategies to design a crowd-control plan unique to L.A. site.
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'Occupy' protesters take to streets in San Diego and Encinitas
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Un-Occupying L.A.
The LAPD and protesters showed admirable restraint in resolving the City Hall demonstration.
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More than 200 Occupy L.A. protesters remain in jail
Civil rights attorneys say many of them may not be charged and should be freed immediately. Most of the arrestees, who face a minimum bail of $5,000, are young, white and male.
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St. Paul's Cathedral dean quits in Occupy London standoff
Graeme Knowles says his position as dean 'was becoming untenable' in the face of mounting criticism of St. Paul's response to the anticapitalist protesters camped outside the church.