Imperial Valley Press

Chief: 3 o cers assaulted over weekend in Charlottes­ville

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. (AP) — Investigat­ions are underway into assaults against three officers in Charlottes­ville during the weekend events marking the anniversar­y of a violent white nationalis­t rally, police said Monday.

Charlottes­ville Police Chief RaShall Brackney gave that update at a news conference Monday afternoon, joined by leaders from other agencies involved in the immense law enforcemen­t response. The one-year anniversar­y saw worship services, vigils and protests that were largely peaceful but tense at times.

Eight arrests were made in Charlottes­ville over the weekend, including one person who was arrested twice, Brackney said.

Police previously said one o cer was assaulted after approachin­g a man whose face was covered, and Brackney added Monday that two other officers were punched by a woman who was then pulled away by her friends. No suspects were in custody.

Law enforcemen­t officials faced blistering criticism in the wake of last year’s rally for what was widely received as an overly passive response to the violence that unfolded.

Fighting broke out in the streets between rally participan­ts and counterpro­testers.

Authoritie­s eventually forced the crowd to disperse, but chaos erupted again when a car barreled into a crowd of counterpro­testers that day, killing a woman and injuring dozens of other people.

Officials at Monday’s news conference defended the handling of this year’s events, which many activists criticized as over-policing.

City spokesman Brian Wheeler said that in response to last year’s events “it would have been irresponsi­ble for this community not to have been prepared for a worst-case scenario.”

Brackney said she couldn’t give an exact number of personnel on the ground over the weekend, giving a ballpark figure of about 1,000. She also said she couldn’t immediatel­y provide the total cost of the operations.

 ??  ?? Metro Police and Secret Service personnel are forced back by counter-protesters outside of the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue security barrier on 17th Street while attempting to escort attendees of the “Unite the Right 2” rally from Lafayette Park in Washington, on Sunday. CRAIG HUDSON/CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL VIA AP
Metro Police and Secret Service personnel are forced back by counter-protesters outside of the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue security barrier on 17th Street while attempting to escort attendees of the “Unite the Right 2” rally from Lafayette Park in Washington, on Sunday. CRAIG HUDSON/CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL VIA AP

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