Imperial Valley Press

Protester scales Statue of Liberty’s base forces evacuation

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NEW YORK (AP) — A woman protesting U.S. immigratio­n policy climbed the Statue of Liberty’s base and forced the monument’s evacuation on the Fourth of July hours after several other demonstrat­ors had hung a banner on the statue’s pedestal and had been arrested.

About 100 feet abovegroun­d, the climber engaged in a four-hour standoff with police before two officers climbed up to the base and went over to her. With the dramatic scene unfolding on live television, she and the officers edged carefully around the rim of the statue’s robes toward a ladder, and she climbed down about 25 feet (8 meters) to the monument’s observatio­n point and was taken into custody.

The woman had participat­ed earlier in displaying a banner calling for abolishing the federal government’s chief immigratio­n enforcemen­t agency, said Jay W. Walker, an organizer with Rise and Resist, which arranged the demonstrat­ion.

The group initially tweeted that the climber had “no connection” to the demonstrat­ion. Walker later said she was involved but others had no idea she would make the climb, which wasn’t part of the planned protest. He said he didn’t know her name.

“We don’t know whether she had this planned before she ever got to Liberty Island or whether it was a spur-of-the-moment decision,” Walker said.

Regardless, he said he felt the publicity would help the group’s cause.

A spokesman for the National Park Service, which runs the monument, saw it differentl­y.

“I feel really sorry for those visitors today” who had to leave or couldn’t come, spokesman Jerry Willis said. “People have the right to speak out. I don’t think they have the right to co-opt the Statue of Liberty to do it.”

The climber ascended from the observatio­n point, Willis said. Visitors were forced to leave Liberty Island hours before its normal 6:15 p.m. closing time, he said.

Earlier and farther below, at least six people were taken into custody after unfurling a banner that read “Abolish I.C.E.,” referring to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, whose officers arrest and deport immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally, among other duties.

Willis said federal regulation­s prohibit hanging banners from the monument.

Rise and Resist opposes President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and advocates ending deportatio­ns and family separation­s at the U.S.-Mexico border.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has said the president’s immigratio­n policy is a step forward for public safety.

Under Trump’s zero-tolerance policy, the government has begun requiring border agents to arrest and prosecute anyone caught entering the country illegally.

 ??  ?? In this image made from video by PIX11, a person (center) leans against the robes of the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island, as one of the police officers climbed up on a ladder to stand on a ledge nearby talking the climber into descending in New york on Wednesday. PIX11 VIA AP
In this image made from video by PIX11, a person (center) leans against the robes of the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island, as one of the police officers climbed up on a ladder to stand on a ledge nearby talking the climber into descending in New york on Wednesday. PIX11 VIA AP

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