An Icon of Occupy Wall Street Remembered


AP News: Dorli Rainey, symbol of Occupy movement, dies at 95

SEATTLE (AP) — Dorli Rainey, a selfdescribed “old lady in combat boots” who became a symbol of the Occupy protest movement when she was photographed after being peppersprayed by Seattle police, has died. She was 95.

Dorli Rainey, in the days of Occupy Wall Street, in Seattle

The longtime political activist died on Aug. 12, the Seattle Times reported. Her daughter, Gabriele Rainey, told the newspaper her mom was “so active because she loved this country, and she wanted to make sure that the country was good to its people.”

Rainey was a fixture in the local progressive movement for decades, demonstrating for racial justice, affordable housing and public transit, and against war, nuclear weapons and big banks.

In November 2011, in the early days of the Occupy Wall Street movement, Rainey, then 84, joined protesters in blocking downtown Seattle intersections. She was hit when Seattle police used pepper spray to clear the crowd.

On Nov. 15, 2011, Rainey said she was taking a bus downtown when she heard helicopters overhead.

“Oh boy, I’d better go show solidarity with New York,” she thought at the time. She joined a group of Occupy Seattle protesters.

Seattle police “picked up their bicycles and started shoving them at us and confining us in a very small place and they started to pepper-spray,” she said of the incident that made her famous worldwide.

Fellow protesters poured milk over her face to ease the sting, and a seattlepi.comphotographer, Joshua Trujillo, captured a stunning image of her staring defiantly into the camera, her eyes red and milk dripping off her face.

Dotli Rainey, with milk and tear gas, with Occupy in Seattle, November 2011. She bounced back quickly.

The photo become a worldwide symbol for the protest movement. She was profiled by The Washington Post, The Atlantic, The Associated Press and The Guardian.

“It’s a gruesome picture, she told the AP. I’m really not that bad looking.”

ThenMayor Mike McGinn apologized and ordered a review of the incident. Rainey was back out protesting a couple days later.

“This has been a wonderful week,” she told the Seattle Times. “I think we have accomplished something that we have been trying to get, and that is attention.”

“You only get real attention when you block a few streets.”

McGinn said that when he called her to apologize, she gave him a list of her concerns with the Police Department. He said the incident did cause Seattle police to modify its policy on use of pepper spray, a change that did not stick.

“Dorli is legendary, and deservedly so, for her activism,” McGinn said Friday. “She was just omnipresent and a conscience and a voice for change, and I deeply, deeply, deeply respected her.”

Rainey was born in Austria in 1926. She was a Red Cross nurse and then worked in Europe as a technical translator for the U.S. Army for 10 years. She married Max Rainey, a civil engineer who got a job with Boeing, and they moved to the Seattle area in 1956.

She worked as a courtappointed special advocate, representing children who have experienced abuse or neglect, and as a realestate agent. She served on the Issaquah School Board and ran for King County Council a halfcentury ago, and she made a brief run for Seattle mayor in 2009.

She had three children, Gabriele, of Asheville, North Carolina; Michael, of Boston; and Andrea, who died in 2014. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Max

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