Lodi News-Sentinel

Protests erupt around Trump inaugurati­on.

- By Lindsay Wise and Tim Johnson

WASHINGTON — Enraged bands of black-clad protesters smashed windows and clashed with riot police Friday in a rolling series of demonstrat­ions that disrupted Donald Trump’s inaugural festivitie­s.

The number of arrests mounted during the day, and hit 217 by early evening. Six police officers were reported injured.

Some of the protesters came prepared for violence, carrying hammers and crowbars and wearing gas masks. Some carried flags with the circle-A symbol for the anarchist movement, which has carried out sporadic violent protests in Western countries in recent decades.

They smashed huge glass windows at branches of Starbucks, McDonald’s, Au Bon Pain and at a Crowne Plaza Hotel in an area along Northwest 12th and 13th streets in downtown Washington.

Interim D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham said police believed the violence was planned in advance and not spontaneou­s.

“We have significan­t damage in a number of blocks in our city,” Newsham said, adding that 400 to 500 protesters took part in the violence.

Police responded with tear gas and flash grenades, whose thunder reverberat­ed just five blocks north of the inaugural parade route. Police temporaril­y restored calm before the parade, only to see it flare again afterward, forcing police to guide contingent­s of Trump supporters to inaugural balls amid lingering tear gas in the air.

White nationalis­t Richard Spencer, who made headlines when he gave a Nazi salute to Trump at a gathering after the Nov. 8 election, was struck in the face by a protester as he was giving a video interview at roughly 2:30 p.m.

“You hate black people!” another protester yelled.

“I don’t hate black people,” Spencer said, in pain, holding his hand to his face.

A few minutes later, another protester ran up and spat in Spencer’s face. Spencer was then whisked into a car, which drove off.

Newsham said three of the six injured police suffered head injuries from flying objects, which he said included stones and bricks. None of the injuries were life-threatenin­g, he added.

“We will not allow the destructio­n and vandalism of our neighborho­ods,” Mayor Muriel Bowser said in an early evening news conference.

At one point in the afternoon, as the inaugural parade was well underway, clouds of inky smoke and bright flames poured from the vandalized stretch limo near the intersecti­on of 13th and K Streets, close to the offices of The Washington Post.

Among those present at the protests was Jill Stein, the losing Green Party presidenti­al candidate, who said some Americans were angry over Trump’s policies and his nomination­s of super wealthy people to his Cabinet.

“This swamp that he was supposed to drain is overflowin­g now. It’s like the corporatio­ns no longer need lobbyists because they’ve been directly empowered to raid the cookie jar,” Stein said.

Another protester, Patrick McGuire, a 37-year-old from Baltimore, appeared overwhelme­d by teargas.

“You just want to crawl up into a ball and wait for it to be over,” McGuire said. “You just need someone to come behind you and put their hand on your back and tell you it’s all going to be OK.”

Earlier in the day, the scenes were all peaceful. After some initial shoving, riot police separated protesters from visitors making their way through the blue-ticket gates close to the Capitol, at First and D streets Northwest. The clump of protesters, though, squeezed the flow of visitors to a trickle, and police worked to divert some ticket holders to a nearby entrance.

About 200 protesters banged drums and chanted, “Si, se puede,” “Shut it down” and “We reject the presidente­lect!” One sign, in Arabic, read, “Freedom.”

Occasional­ly, chants of “U-S-A!” were returned by inaugurati­on celebrants.

“I’ve heard multiple things like, people in Iraq aren’t human beings,” said Erica Ewing, who said she was protesting on behalf of Witness Against Torture, an advocacy group. “We’re here to witness that they are human beings, too.”

Ewing, 20, who said she worked for a nonprofit group in Cleveland, said she’d come to the capital with a message: “We are telling Trump now that he must shut down Guantanamo and say that the U.S. will not partake in torture.”

The Obama administra­tion on Thursday transferre­d four prisoners to the custody of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, leaving 41 war-on-terror captives still in the naval facility in Cuba. Trump has promised to keep the Guantanamo prison open and “load it up” with more suspected terrorists. Nearly 800 men have passed through its cells.

Ewing said her group also had protested the Obama administra­tion in past years, “telling him to keep his promise to close Guantanamo.”

Barbara Lyons, 79, and her son, Jeff Lyons, 55, came from Illinois to join the protests. Neither was an Obama voter — they don’t believe change can come through voting without more street activism first — but their opposition to Trump runs deep and covers all the big issues: race relations, immigratio­n, jobs, the environmen­t.

“He brought me into it,” Barbara Lyons said of her son. “I am one of the privileged, and I have to fight for everyone else.”

Jeff Lyons hesitated to call the protests “a start;” he said protesters should be ready to play the long game in reversing the forces that had brought Trump to power:

“It’s going to take years and a growing movement to turn around.”

Greg Byrne, 69, a pig farmer from West Virginia, said he’d come to protest because he was concerned about the future of his children and grandchild­ren.

Byrne liked Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independen­t who ran for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, but he said he wasn’t sure any president could do all that needed to be done.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS ?? Protesters block K street during the inaugurati­on of President Donald Trump on Friday in Washington, D.C.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS Protesters block K street during the inaugurati­on of President Donald Trump on Friday in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States