After Asking OPD to Leave, This Cafe Made a Plan for Community Safety

Published: May 21, 2021, 10 a.m.

b"In 2018 the\\xa0Hasta Muerte coffee shop in East Oakland made national headlines when they asked Oakland police officers to leave their cafe.\\nMatt Gereghty, part-owner of the cooperative cafe, was the first person to tell an officer the cafe's policy of asking cops to leave. He read from a collectively written script the staff had composed before opening the shop.\\nGereghty tells me it wasn't meant to be a major thing, just the cafe's attempts to ensure peace of mind for their customers by creating a space without cops. They serve a community where people have had traumatic experiences with police officers, or live in fear due to their documentation status.\\nKeep in mind it was 2018, and President Donald Trump's pro-police and anti-immigration rhetoric was flooding media.\\nWhen people found out about the policy, it led to pro-Trump, right wing protestors waving American flags with thin blue lines in front of the cafe. Hasta Muerte also received a letter from the president of the Oakland Police Association saying the policy was \\u201ca matter of concern for all Oakland Police Officers.\\u201d\\nThe story was covered locally and nationally; it grew to the point that they even mentioned it on\\xa0The View. But Hasta Muerte hasn't officially talked to any publications about what happened until now.\\nThis week on Rightnowish, we discuss this East Oakland cafe's community-based approach to safety, cops and the media."