US police and anti-Wall Street protesters have clashed in the Northern California college city of Berkeley, hours after the deadline for the protesters to leave their camps expired. Scuffles broke out late Wednesday night after city's police officers handed out eviction notices to the protesters, asking them to dismantle their encampment at Civic Center Park by 10 p.m. (local time) or face arrests. Witnesses said police drove onto the park grounds in patrol cars and began confiscating protesters' tents. Two protesters were arrested during police crackdown. The Berkeley camp, set up in mid-October, remains as one of the few in the country that has not been shut down so far. Security forces broke up a similar anti-corporate protest at the nearby University of California, Berkeley in November. Police used batons to disperse students and other protesters. US police have shut down most of the larger protest camps in cities like New York and Los Angeles with the use of force and nightstick. On Tuesday, security forces also arrested nine Occupy protesters in Denver, the capital city of the central state of Colorado, and dismantled their camp. The Occupy Wall Street movement began when a group of demonstrators gathered in New York's financial district on September 17 to protest against the unjust distribution of wealth in the country and the excessive influence of big corporations on US policies.