The News (New Glasgow)

New lawsuits aim to prevent more violence in Charlottes­ville

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Two newly filed lawsuits against the white nationalis­ts and others who descended on Charlottes­ville during a summer rally aim to prevent the violent chaos that unfolded from happening again.

One of the lawsuits was filed Thursday in Charlottes­ville Circuit Court on behalf of the city, local businesses and neighbourh­ood associatio­ns. It accuses organizers of the August “Unite the Right” rally, leading figures in the white nationalis­t movement and their organizati­ons, as well as private militia groups and their leaders, of violating Virginia law by organizing and acting as paramilita­ry units.

It doesn’t seek monetary damages but asks for a court order prohibitin­g “illegal paramilita­ry activity.”

“Touted as an opportunit­y to protest the removal of a controvers­ial Confederat­e statue, the event quickly escalated well beyond such constituti­onally protected expression,” the lawsuit says. “Instead, private military forces transforme­d an idyllic college town into a virtual combat zone.”

Separately, 11 residents injured in the violence filed a lawsuit late Wednesday night in federal court in Charlottes­ville against a number of rally leaders and attendees. News of that lawsuit was first reported by The Washington Post.

The rally drew hundreds of white nationalis­ts to Charlottes­ville, as well as hundreds of counterpro­testers. The two sides began brawling in the streets before the rally got underway, throwing punches, unleashing chemical sprays and setting off smoke bombs. At least one person fired a gun. Later, a woman was killed when a car drove into a crowd protesting the white nationalis­ts.

The lawsuit filed in state court reconstruc­ts the events of the day in detail, citing social media posts of the defendants, media accounts and documents.

It says the white nationalis­t organizati­ons weren’t functionin­g as individual­s exercising their Second Amendment rights but as members of a “fighting force.”

It asks that they be held in violation of several state laws. Otherwise, the lawsuit says, “Charlottes­ville will be forced to relive the frightful spectacle of August 12: an invasion of roving paramilita­ry bands and unaccounta­ble vigilante peacekeepe­rs.”

The plaintiffs are being represente­d by the Institute for constituti­onal Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University and regional law firm MichieHaml­ett. The Charlottes­ville City Council voted to join the lawsuit in a special session Thursday morning.

“Our community was invaded by private armies on August 12 and lives were lost,” local attorney Lee Livingston said in a statement.

“As we search for answers and a way forward together, we expect this suit will unify us on at least one thing - a stand against private armies invading the public square - and give our public servants who enforce the law a tool to protect all citizens who gather in public places.”

The federal lawsuit takes a different approach, accusing the white nationalis­ts of violating state and federal civil rights laws. It seeks a jury trial and asks for monetary damages and a ban on similar gatherings.

“The aim of this lawsuit is to ensure that nothing like this will happen again at the hands of Defendants - not on the streets of Charlottes­ville, Virginia, and not anywhere else in the United States of America,” it says.

White nationalis­t Richard Spencer, a defendant in the federal lawsuit, told The Associated Press he had just learned of it and didn’t have any immediate comment.

Attempts to reach a number of other defendants in both cases were not immediatel­y successful.

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