Final answer:
Kelley claims that no one in the room can feel free from participation, and this is supported by vivid descriptions of lone officers overwhelmed by crowds and the goal of helping readers understand feelings of fear.
Step-by-step explanation:
On pages 4 and 5 of the speech, Kelley claims that 'No one in this room tonight can feel free from such participation' because of the evidence of government workers and bystanders hiding behind locked doors with no police protection. One sentence that provides the reasoning behind this claim is 'Use vivid description and concrete language to recreate images that showed lone officers overwhelmed by crowds of people and beaten.' Another sentence that supports this claim is 'Help your readers understand feelings of fear.'