Truro News

Law enforcemen­t failed at rally: report

White nationalis­ts were protesting plans to remove statue when car drove into crowd

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Law enforcemen­t’s response to a violent white nationalis­t rally in Virginia last summer failed on multiple fronts, leading to “deep distrust of government” in the Charlottes­ville community, an independen­t review released Friday found.

Former U. S. Attorney Tim Heaphy’s months-long investigat­ion of the Charlottes­ville rally found that the city failed by not adequately communicat­ing or co-ordinating in advance and by removing an officer from an area where a car plowed into counterpro­testers and killed a woman.

Heaphy’s team interviewe­d 150 people and pored over half a million documents for the report, which found a lack of preparatio­n and co-ordination between state and city police and a passive response by officers to the chaos.

“This represents a failure of one of government’s core functions-the protection of fundamenta­l rights,” the report said. “Law enforcemen­t also failed to maintain order and protect citizens from harm, injury, and death. Charlottes­ville preserved neither of those principles on Aug. 12, which has led to deep distrust of government within this community.”

White nationalis­ts who descended on Charlottes­ville in part to protest plans to remove a statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee began fighting in the streets with counterdem­onstrators before the event even officially began. The brawling went on for nearly an hour in front of officers until the event eventually disbanded. Later, as counterdem­onstrators were peacefully marching through a downtown street, a car drove into the crowd, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring many more.

The report says “planning and co-ordination breakdowns” before Aug. 12 led to “disastrous results.”

“Because of their misalignme­nt and lack of accessible protective gear, officers failed to intervene in physical altercatio­ns that took place in areas adjacent to Emancipati­on Park,” the report said.

State police directed their officers “to remain behind barricades rather than risk injury responding to conflicts between protesters and counter-protesters,” it said. And Charlottes­ville commanders “similarly instructed their officers not to intervene in all but the most serious physical confrontat­ions.”

State police and Charlottes­ville police were unable to communicat­e by radio the day of the rally because they were on different channels, the report said.

The review also found that an officer was initially supposed to be stationed near the intersec-

tion where the car plowed into counterpro­testers. But the officer asked for relief out of safety concerns and was not replaced.

Only a sawhorse was in place when the car drove into the crowd, killing Heyer and injuring at least 19 others. The day’s death toll rose to three when two state troopers sent to monitor the scene and support the governor’s motorcade died in a helicopter crash.

Virginia Gov. Terry Mcauliffe, Police Chief Al Thomas and other top officials have previously defended the law enforcemen­t response, saying police had to show restraint because some people in the crowd were heavily armed.

Rally organizers and counterpro­testers as well as some law enforcemen­t experts have questioned why authoritie­s didn’t do more to separate opposing forces or step in once the violence began breaking out.

City officials had tried to move the rally to a larger park about 1.5

kilometres from downtown Charlottes­ville, but their request was blocked by a federal judge after the American Civil Liberties Union sued on free-speech grounds.

Heaphy makes a series of recommenda­tions, including suggesting that the General Assembly empower cities to enact “reasonable restrictio­ns” on the right to carry guns at large protests.

Other recommenda­tions include:

■ Police should make sure that conflictin­g groups are kept away from each other.

■ Police should respond immediatel­y to any violence.

■ Charlottes­ville police should find better ways to gather intelligen­ce on protest groups and use that informatio­n in their operationa­l plans for protests.

■ Charlottes­ville police need to do a better job engaging with citizens, business and community groups who are “divided” over the events of the summer.

 ?? AP photo ?? Attorney Timothy Heaphy gestures as he delivers an independen­t report on the issues concerning the white supremacis­t rally and protest in Charlottes­ville.
AP photo Attorney Timothy Heaphy gestures as he delivers an independen­t report on the issues concerning the white supremacis­t rally and protest in Charlottes­ville.

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