Los Angeles Times

Violence erupts at Berkeley rally

At least seven people are injured, 10 arrested amid the violence.

- By Peter H. King and Ruben Vives

Police arrest 10 in clashes between pro-Trump marchers and counterpro­testers.

BERKELEY — For the second time in a month, Berkeley was the scene of violent demonstrat­ions as supporters of President Trump clashed with counter-protesters Saturday on the city’s streets.

At least 10 people were arrested and seven others were injured as a series of disturbanc­es marred what was supposed to be a proTrump rally in the famously liberal community.

The unrest underscore­s the heightened political tensions that have taken hold since Trump took office in January.

A scheduled appearance by conservati­ve provocateu­r Milo Yiannopoul­os was canceled amid a violent protest on the UC Berkeley campus last month. That sparked a national debate — in which Trump himself took part — about the line between the right to demonstrat­e and protecting free speech that some find objectiona­ble.

Saturday’s “March 4 Trump” rally, one of several held across the country, began at Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park about 2 p.m.

The Trump supporters

marched several blocks but were met by counter-demonstrat­ors, and fights began breaking out, said Matthai Chakko, a spokesman for the city of Berkeley.

Videos and photos posted on Twitter showed people punching each other and pulling their hair, with one man using an unidentifi­ed object to beat another person. Several people in the crowd were pepper-sprayed, including an elderly man.

At least two people, with their faces covered up, could be seen on video trying to set fire to an American flag, while a photo on Twitter showed the bloody face of a man who wore a T-shirt that said “Trump is My President.”

Amy Leona Masker, a 23year-old student from Las Positas College in Livermore who was on crutches, was among the counter-demonstrat­ors. She and a fellow student were standing together when they saw the fighting break out.

“These crutches came in handy when people started shoving,” Masker said.

She and the other student said one of the Trump supporters, who wore a gas mask and had a wooden shield, was one of the pepper-sprayers. They said there were several isolated fights, but when they erupted, people from both sides tried to break them up.

Masker said she came out to “support what really is our country.”

Berkeley Police Officer Byron White said 10 arrests were made: one on charges of resisting arrest, four on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, including a dagger, and five on suspicion of battery. About seven medical evaluation­s were made on the scene. None of the injured wanted to be taken to the hospital.

Chakko said among the other items police confiscate­d at the rally were metal pipes, bats and two-byfours. “A group of people carrying bricks were detained and the bricks were confiscate­d,” he said.

City and Berkeley Police Department officials said they were aware of the rally and had prepared for it. They said other groups besides Trump supporters and protesters were also at the rally.

The pro-Trump rally was part of a nationwide effort to show support for the president and his “America First” policies, according to the website of Main Street Patriots, one of the organizers.

“With high-profile acts of terrorism at home and abroad, with police shootings in the headlines and police officers dead in the line of duty, the government’s first duty to keep the country safe has to be addressed,” the group’s website states.

Berkeley was not the only city that reported clashes between demonstrat­ors.

Six people protesting a Trump rally in St. Paul, Minn., were arrested on felony riot charges after they lit fireworks inside the Minnesota State Capitol and fled, police told the Associated Press. About 400 people attended the St. Paul event, and about 50 showed up to protest it. Some other minor scuffles between the dueling demonstrat­ors were quickly defused.

In Nashville, two people were arrested as protesters clashed with Trump supporters at the Tennessee Capitol. The groups at times cursed at each other and made physical contact, which state troopers broke up, NPR affiliate WPLN reported.

In Florida near Mar-aLago, where Trump is spending the weekend at his private estate, the Palm Beach Post reported that people on both sides exchanged profanity. Trump’s motorcade briefly stopped so he could wave at supporters.

Some of the counter-protesters appeared to be members of the so-called black bloc, a group that UC Berkeley officials blamed for many of the problems on campus last month.

The self-described anarchists or anti-fascists have left school and law enforcemen­t officials struggling to cope with their tactics.

The term “black bloc” was used to describe the tight wedges of black-clad protesters in helmets and masks who appeared in street demonstrat­ions in Germany in the 1970s, confoundin­g efforts to single out, identify and prosecute individual­s.

 ?? Dan Honda East Bay Times ?? COUNTER-PROTESTERS try to wrest a wooden pole away from a member of a pro-Trump rally Saturday in Berkeley. Police confiscate­d metal pipes, bats, two-by-fours and bricks. At least 10 people were arrested.
Dan Honda East Bay Times COUNTER-PROTESTERS try to wrest a wooden pole away from a member of a pro-Trump rally Saturday in Berkeley. Police confiscate­d metal pipes, bats, two-by-fours and bricks. At least 10 people were arrested.

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