Las Vegas Review-Journal

Anger the day after

Police at the ready as anti-racist protesters gather in Virginia

- By David S. Cloud and Jaweed Kaleem Tribune Washington Bureau

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — Charlottes­ville was on edge Sunday as police and residents tried to piece together how a white nationalis­t rally turned deadly when a man rammed his car into counterdem­onstrators in an act described by a member of the Trump administra­tion as terrorism.

Makeshift memorials dotted downtown streets where bloody brawls took place the day before. And police in riot gear stood at the ready in case of more clashes as anti-racist activists gathered near City Hall, holding signs that said, “No Trump, no KKK, no racist USA.”

Rallies were taking place around the country, from Los Angeles to Miami, in support of the dozens injured in Charlottes­ville and the three who died, including two state police officers whose helicopter crashed Saturday.

“To the white supremacis­ts and the neo-nazis who came to our state yesterday, there is no place for you here,” Virginia Gov. Terry Mcauliffe said, drawing an implicit contrast with President Donald Trump’s refusal to single out the same groups for blame.

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“Shame on you,” said the governor, who spoke at the Mt. Zion First African Baptist Church, blocks from the site of the clashes.

On Sunday afternoon, angry protesters chased down one of the rally’s main organizers as he attempted to address a throng of reporters outside Charlottes­ville City Hall.

Members of the crowd shouted “murderer” and “shame” at Jason Kessler, a blogger based in Charlottes­ville, as a police sniper watched from a nearby rooftop. One man spat on Kessler before he darted away with the help of a police escort.

Clashes broke out in the city Saturday between anti-racism activists and far-right protesters, many of whom carried shields, weapons and Nazi and Confederat­e battle flags. One woman was killed when a driver plowed a sports car into a crowd of counterdem­onstrators.

On Sunday, city officials identified the woman as Heather Heyer, 32, of Charlottes­ville. A memorial vigil for her was planned for Sunday evening before it was postponed because of safety concerns. Flowers, cards and a photo of Heyer were spread on the street where she was struck along with a sign that read, “No place for hate!”

The driver — identified as James Alex Fields Jr., 20, from Ohio — was arrested and charged with second-degree murder, malicious wounding and failure to stop at the scene of an accident that ended in death.

The suspect’s mother, Samantha Bloom, who lives in Toledo, Ohio, said she didn’t know that her son was attending a white supremacis­t rally.

“I thought it had something to do with Trump,” she told the Toledo Blade, saying she avoided getting “too involved” in her son’s political views.

Derek Weimer, who was Fields’ high school history teacher when he grew up in northern Kentucky, told WCPO-TV in Cincinnati that Fields had been “infatuated with Nazis” and had “radical ideas on race.”

Photos circulatin­g on social media appeared to show Fields posing with members of Vanguard America, a white nationalis­t group, on the day of the rally. Fields held a black-andwhite shield with the organizati­on’s insignia. The group said Fields was not a member and that shields were distribute­d widely.

More details also emerged about the two state troopers killed when a State Police helicopter crashed near the city after monitoring the chaos.

H. Jay Cullen, 48, was a veteran of

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James Alex Fields Jr.

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