Lodi News-Sentinel

For more on Trump and the Charlottes­ville violence.

- By Jay Reeves

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Emboldened and proclaimin­g victory after a bloody weekend in Virginia, white nationalis­ts are planning more demonstrat­ions to promote their agenda after the violence that left a woman dead and dozens injured.

The University of Florida said white provocateu­r Richard Spencer, whose appearance­s sometimes stoke unrest, is seeking permission to speak there next month. White nationalis­t Preston Wiginton had said he was planning a “White Lives Matter” rally at Texas A&M University in September, but the university later said it has been canceled.

Also, a neo-Confederat­e group had asked the state of Virginia for permission to rally at a monument to Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond on Sept. 16, but later canceled its plans. Organizer Bragdon Bowling told media outlets Tuesday that Americans for Richmond Monument Preservati­on is pulling its permit request for the Sept. 16 rally in light of the violence in Charlottes­ville, Va.

Bowling filed the permit request weeks before the Charlottes­ville rally.

Other events are likely to be held.

“We’re going to be more active than ever before,” Matthew Heimbach, a white nationalis­t leader, said Monday.

James Alex Fields Jr., a young man who was said to idolize Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany in high school, was charged with killing a woman by slamming a car into a group of counter-protesters at a white nationalis­t rally Sunday in Charlottes­ville.

Fields, 20, who recently moved to Ohio from his home state of Kentucky, was held without bail on murder charges. He was photograph­ed at the rally behind a shield bearing the emblem of the white nationalis­t Vanguard America, though the group denied he was a member.

Two state troopers also died Sunday when their helicopter crashed during an effort to contain the violence.

The U.S. Justice Department said it will review the violence, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions told ABC the death of counter-protester Heather Heyer, 32, met the definition of domestic terrorism.

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