On February 8, 1912, the day the ordinance took effect, 5000 citizens marched in support of the
California Free Speech League. Forty-one protesters were arrested. By February 10, forty-four more were arrested and charged with violating a more restricted ordinance that included zones outside the 49 block restricted zone. Also on February 10, a small article in the
San Diego Union called for the formation of a "horsewhip
vigilante committee" to deal with the "invasion" of Wobblies. These incidents occurred quite frequently, but there was no significant outcry from the middle class citizens of San Diego. The
San Diego Board of Supervisors authorized mounted police to patrol the Orange County border to prevent Wobblies from entering the fray. On March 4, the San Diego Police
deputized 500 men to fight the wobblies. An editorial in the
Evening Tribune claimed "hanging is none too good" for the Wobblies. "They are the waste material of creation and should be drained off into the sewer of oblivion there to rot in cold obstruction like any other
excrement.” They also arrested people attempting to sell newspapers including the
San Francisco Bulletin,
San Diego Herald and the
Labor Leader. On April 5, sixty-five year old editor of the
Herald Abraham R. Sauer
— who published articles supportive of the free speech fight and critical of the police
— was kidnapped, hung by the neck and allowed to live in exchange for a promise of silence. The state of California finally intervened, as Governor
Hiram Johnson was flooded with demands for an inquiry into the arrests and
vigilantism in San Diego. Governor Johnson sent
Harris Weinstock to act as an investigative commissioner. Weinstock claimed the vigilantes included members of the county district attorneys office, the city prosecutors office, and the fire department and that publisher
John D. Spreckels was "the greatest vigilante of them all." Ultimately, however, Weinstock changed course and concluded that there was no mistreatment of prisoners and that the police were “above average in intelligence, character, and personality.“ Weinstock likened the situation to
Tsarist Russia and suggested the
attorney general of California file criminal charges against “the citizens’ committee, the press who condoned the lawlessness, the Merchants Association, the Chamber of Commerce, and other commercial bodies,” but he did not. He did not find any violence committed by the IWW, but insisted on "the most extreme punishment within the law" against them. Weinstock interviewed anyone police and anyone who volunteered in the crisis in April 1912, but he was criticized by the
Free Speech League for not interviewing anyone involved on the labor side of the protest. The report was not released until May 20, 1912, and it did not include the police killing of Joseph Mikolash, a Wobbly, inside the San Diego headquarters of IWWon May 7 or the Reitman affair. ==Emma Goldman and Ben Reitman==