Las Vegas Review-Journal

In Richmond, more protests net 16 arrests

- The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — Fires were set, windows were smashed and 16 people were arrested as demonstrat­ions continued for a second night in Virginia’s capital city, Richmond’s police chief said at a news conference Monday.

The protests on Sunday evening followed demonstrat­ions Saturday night that had been billed by some as support for protesters on the other side of the country in Portland, Oregon. That city has been experienci­ng ongoing tensions between protesters and U.S. agents at the federal courthouse.

Richmond police Chief Gerald Smith said his department saw a flyer calling for demonstrat­ions Sunday that carried the same tone of “intimidati­on” and “wanting to produce fear” that flyers for Saturday night’s protests had contained.

Smith said Sunday night’s damage included three fires as well as smashed windows, including one at the police department for Virginia Commonweal­th University.

The chief said that the ages of those arrested ranged from 17 to 45. Charges included trespassin­g, riot with a dangerous weapon and transport of a loaded rifle within city limits.

“The city of Richmond is open and welcomes those who would like to come here in expression of their First Amendment rights,” Smith said. “However, we have to take action when we know that violence is coming.”

Smith said police took a proactive stance and began making arrests in Monroe Park after 10 p.m. The park “is clearly closed at dusk,” the chief said.

The chief said that his department is working on identifyin­g any groups that were affiliated with Sunday’s demonstrat­ions. Some individual­s from Saturday night have been identified as being from both left-wing and right-wing movements, he said.

On Saturday night, Virginia State Police and Richmond police said they worked to clear a crowd of a several hundred demonstrat­ors that had ripped down police tape and moved forward with lasers and firecracke­rs.

Six men among the protesters were arrested that night and face various charges, including unlawful assembly, rioting with a firearm and assault on a law enforcemen­t officer.

Protesters had been planning Saturday’s demonstrat­ion for days. It was called “Richmond Stands with Portland,” news outlets reported, in an apparent reaction to ongoing tensions between protesters and U.S. agents at the federal courthouse in Oregon’s largest city.

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