Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protesters in Boston vocal but not violent

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

BOSTON — Tens of thousands of demonstrat­ors chanting anti-Nazi slogans crammed Boston Common and marched through Boston’s streets Saturday morning, dwarfing a group that cut short its planned “free speech rally.”

By 1 p.m., the rally attendees had left the downtown park pavilion without making their planned speeches for an event that was scheduled to last for another hour. A cheer went up among the counterpro­testers, and many of them began to leave. Hundreds of others danced in circles and sang, “Hey hey, ho ho. White supremacy has got to go.”

In anticipati­on of potential violence, city officials had more than 500 police officers corralling the downtown park, installed security cameras and constructe­d elaborate barriers to separate the “free speech” ralliers from the counterdem­onstrators.

The handful of rally attendees gathered under a pavilion near the center of Boston Common, surrounded by metal barriers and dozens of police. Several hundred feet away, thousands of counterpro­testers carried signs declaring “Black Lives Matter” and “Hate Has No Home In Boston,” while chanting “we can’t hear you” when it apFAYETTEV­ILLE

peared that the ralliers had begun to speak.

Boston Police Commission­er William Evans said there were 27 arrests, primarily for disorderly conduct. He said no officers or protesters were injured, and there was no property damage.

Marchers were banned from carrying weapons, bats, sticks, flagpoles or anything that might be used as weapons or projectile­s. Backpacks were subject to search. Evans said three attendees were wearing ballistics vests, and one of the people was later found to be armed. It was unclear if those three people were among the arrests.

Evans said there were three groups in attendance: attendees of the “free speech” rally, counterpro­testers, and a small group of people who showed up to cause trouble.

“Overall everyone did a good job,” Evans said. “99.9 percent of people were here for the right reason, and that’s to fight bigotry.”

President Donald Trump compliment­ed Boston police Saturday, tweeting: “Looks like many anti-police agitators in Boston. Police are looking tough and smart! Thank you.”

He also compliment­ed Boston’s Democratic Mayor Marty Walsh, who had said Friday, “If anything gets out of hand, we will shut it down.”

Trump applauded the people in Boston who he said were “speaking out” against bigotry and hate. Trump added in a Twitter message that “Our country will soon come together as one!”

About 10 minutes after Trump’s compliment, Boston’s Police Department tweeted that protesters were throwing rocks and bottles of urine, and asked people publicly to refrain from doing so.

Later Saturday afternoon, members of the Black Lives Matter movement protested at Boston Common, where a Confederat­e flag was burned and protesters pounded on the sides of a police vehicle.

Counterpro­testers had feared the presence of the Ku Klux Klan and other hate groups, even though organizers of the conservati­ves rally had publicly distanced themselves from the neo-Nazis, white supremacis­ts and others who fomented violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., on Aug. 12.

Chris Hood, a “free speech” rally attendee from Dorchester, Mass., said people were unfairly making it seem like the event was going to be “a white supremacis­t Klan rally.”

“That was never the intention,” he said. “We’ve only come here to promote free speech on college campuses, free speech on social media for conservati­ve, right-wing speakers. And we have no intention of violence.”

WHY THEY WERE THERE

Boston officials said at least 40,000 people participat­ed in the counterpro­test, 20,000 of whom joined in a march across town.

Some counterpro­testers dressed entirely in black and wore bandannas over their faces. They chanted anti-Nazi and anti-fascism slogans, and waved signs that read: “Make

Nazis Afraid Again,” ”Love your neighbor,” “Resist fascism” and “Hate never made U.S. great.” Others carried a large banner that read: “Smash White Supremacy.”

Rockeem Robinson, a youth counselor from Cambridge, Mass., said he joined the counterpro­test to “show support for the black community and for all minority communitie­s.”

Katie Griffiths, a social worker also from Cambridge, who works with members of poor and minority communitie­s, said she finds the hate and violence happening “very scary.”

“I see poor people and people of color being scapegoate­d,” she said. “Unlearned lessons can be repeated.”

Rose Fowler, a retired teacher who is black, was among the people who had gathered to march from Roxbury toward Boston Common, about 2 miles away.

“Charlottes­ville is what forced me out here,” said Fowler, 68. “Somebody killed for fighting for me. What is wrong with me if I can’t fight for myself and others?”

One moment of tension came when rally attendees ventured outside the barriers and were promptly confronted by counterpro­testers. One man, draped in a Donald Trump flag, was immediatel­y surrounded by media, while demonstrat­ors chanted at him to “go home.”

After Saturday’s mostly peaceful showdown, and after demonstrat­ors dispersed, a picnic atmosphere took over with stragglers tossing beach balls, banging on bongo drums and playing reggae music.

The Boston Free Speech Coalition, which organized

the rally, said it has nothing to do with white nationalis­m or racial bias, and its group is not affiliated with the Charlottes­ville rally organizers in any way.

HOT SPRINGS RALLY

Rallies also were planned Saturday in other cities across the country.

In Arkansas, 350-400 people attended a rally and counterpro­test in Hot Springs where authoritie­s said three people were arrested Saturday.

The Confederat­e Square Group held a demonstrat­ion on the Arlington Lawn to show support for preserving monuments to Confederat­e history. Organizer James Brock of Hot Springs said Thursday that the rally was focused on preservati­on and did not support neo-Nazism, white supremacy or white nationalis­m.

It was the fourth rally of its kind to be held on Arlington Lawn this year, officials said, but the first since the violence in Charlottes­ville. It drew a group of counterpro­testers, but there were no reports of widescale violence between the two groups.

The Hot Springs Police Department arrested Maya Williams of North Little Rock and Thomas Bemberg of Hot Springs on disorderly conduct charges during the rally, the department said in a news release. The National Park Service arrested Donald Tankersley of Hot Springs on charges of disorderly conduct and violating a federal burning ordinance, the release said.

The Police Department, National Park Service, Garland County sheriff’s office, Arkansas State Police, FBI and other state and local officials collaborat­ed for several days to develop a security plan for the rally, the release said.

“Collective­ly, their actions provided for a peaceful demonstrat­ion where Americans were able to express

their freedom of speech,” Hot Springs Mayor Pat McCabe said in a statement Saturday.

In Dallas, police estimated that about 2,300 people showed up for a rally against racism at City Hall Plaza and chanted “take them down,” in reference to the city’s Confederat­e statues.

Raymond Simmons, a 48-year-old from Dallas, arrived at the rally wearing a picture of the two Virginia state troopers killed in a helicopter crash as they patrolled the gathering in Charlottes­ville. He said people who engaged in violence there should be charged with treason and murder.

Police on horseback later worked to break up a scuffle between Confederat­e monument supporters and counterpro­testers at Pioneer Park, a Civil War cemetery that houses a Confederat­e memorial.

About a half-dozen people at the Dallas cemetery were seen earlier wearing camouflage and carrying long guns and other weapons. The group said they wanted to ensure that no one tried to vandalize the graves or the Confederat­e memorial.

In Austin, hundreds of people gathered at City Hall on Saturday morning, holding signs in support of racial equality.

In Atlanta, a diverse crowd of several hundred people marched from downtown to the home of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in protest of white supremacis­ts and other hate groups. Organizers urged marchers Saturday to practice King’s values and make sure there was no violence.

In Laguna Beach, Calif., an anti-racism rally was held one day before the group America First planned to hold a demonstrat­ion in the same place against illegal aliens.

Mayor Toni Iselman told the crowd gathered near a lifeguard tower that “Laguna Beach doesn’t tolerate diversity, we embrace diversity.”

Saturday’s demonstrat­ors said they didn’t want to confront the other group, but counterdem­onstrators are expected today and police will be out in force.

Protesters also gathered Saturday outside Trump’s private golf club in New Jersey, where he recently spent a 17day vacation.

The protesters staged a “No Hate in the Garden State” rally, with those in attendance sharply rebuking Trump’s response to the protests in Charlottes­ville. Many also blasted his assertion that “both sides” — the white supremacis­ts and the counterpro­testers — were to blame for the Charlottes­ville violence.

And along a side street in Charlottes­ville, the mood was somber about 1:30 p.m. as people marked the time when, a week earlier, a man drove his car into a crowd, killing Heather Heyer.

Heyer’s mother, Susan Bro, stood before a memorial of flowers and candles, weeping as she leaned into her husband, Kim Bro. Hundreds of people gathered around and watched silently as someone wrote with purple chalk — Heyer’s favorite color — on the pavement, “I miss you baby girl, love mom.”

After a few minutes, Susan Bro turned to address the crowd.

“Thank you guys for coming,” she said. “I know she’s gone on, but this is the spot where I lost my baby.”

Susan Bro said she hoped that some good could come out of her daughter’s death. And for those who celebrated Heyer’s death or mocked her, Bro said, “Karma’s a youknow-what.”

 ?? AP/MICHAEL DWYER ?? Police tussle with counterpro­testers Saturday near a rally held by conservati­ve activists in Boston. Thousands of counterpro­testers marched to the historic Boston Common, the site of the conservati­ves’ event.
AP/MICHAEL DWYER Police tussle with counterpro­testers Saturday near a rally held by conservati­ve activists in Boston. Thousands of counterpro­testers marched to the historic Boston Common, the site of the conservati­ves’ event.
 ?? AP/MICHAEL DWYER ?? A supporter of President Donald Trump (right) argues with a counterpro­tester at a rally Saturday organized by conservati­ve activists in Boston.
AP/MICHAEL DWYER A supporter of President Donald Trump (right) argues with a counterpro­tester at a rally Saturday organized by conservati­ve activists in Boston.
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