Los Angeles Times

Protests in Boston are tense but calm

‘Thank God nobody got hurt,’ says the police commission­er. There were 27 arrests.

- By Kurtis Lee and Vera Haller kurtis.lee@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Haller reported from Boston and Times staff writer Lee from Los Angeles.

BOSTON — They arrived by trains, buses and cars, carrying signs and wearing T-shirts in defiance of bigotry and hate.

“I'm Jewish and have never confronted this kind of hate,” Sarah Lutz, 29, of Quincy, Mass., said as she marched in downtown Boston on Saturday. “And then to come here and see all these people supporting each other was overwhelmi­ng in the most positive kind of way.”

Lutz joined tens of thousands of counter-protesters who peacefully descended on Boston Common, the nation’s oldest city park, on Saturday as far-right demonstrat­ors held a so-called free speech rally claiming their 1st Amendment rights to assemble and express their views.

The rallies came a week after violent clashes in Charlottes­ville, Va., between farright activists — including white supremacis­ts and neo-Nazis — and counterpro­testers. One woman was killed and many others injured Aug. 12 when a man whom police identified as a white nationalis­t rammed his car into a crowd of counter-protesters.

With the Charlottes­ville violence still fresh, Boston police said they took extra precaution­s, implementi­ng a tight security plan to stave off any bloody battles. The plan was largely successful and there were no major incidents.

Officials deployed 500 police officers, extra security cameras and barriers to separate the opposing rallies. The city also banned participan­ts from carrying sticks or flagpoles — which were used in the Virginia violence.

William B. Evans, Boston’s police commission­er, said 27 arrests — mostly for disorderly conduct — were made on Saturday.

“Thank God nobody got hurt,” Evans said during an afternoon news conference. “We didn’t want what happened in Virginia here. … We didn’t want that.”

Earlier in the day, even as the protests were largely peaceful, tensions were running high.

Police helicopter­s circled overhead as officers kept the groups separated. The farright group — about 50 in total — were dwarfed by counter-protesters associated with a “Fight White Supremacy” rally in which participan­ts marched from Roxbury, a historical­ly black neighborho­od in Boston, to the Common. A little before 1 p.m., the far-right demonstrat­ors were escorted from the Common by police in the opposite direction from the huge crowd of counter-protesters.

“Go home, losers,” chanted the counter-protesters, many of whom carried signs with anti-racism slogans. “No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA,” read one. Another protester carried a sign with a photo of Heather Heyer, the woman killed at the Charlottes­ville protest, and the words “American hero.”

As a group of police officers escorted what appeared to be a member of the far-right group from the park, several counter-protesters swarmed around yelling “Nazi scum” and “Go home.” Officers placed the man in the back of a police van and drove off to applause from the crowd.

Myiesha Wilson, 28, of Boston, said she came out to show her sons, ages 5 and 8, that opponents of racism were speaking out.

“It’s about Black Lives Matter. It’s about everyone out here coming together, taking a stand for peace in a nonviolent way,” Wilson said. Noting the thousands of counter-protesters, she added, “It’s great. It’s making me a little emotional.”

Pat Scalon, 70, of Andover, Mass., had attended the counter-protest with about 30 members of the Massachuse­tts chapter of Veterans for Peace.

Scalon, a Vietnam vet, said the group included veterans from Iraq and one man who fought in World War II. Referring to the farright activists, he said: “These people are not going to come back because we lost too much blood over the centuries to make this country.”

Organizers of the farright rally said they don’t condone racism, and some speakers who attended last week’s rally in Charlottes­ville were uninvited from the Boston event.

On Saturday afternoon, President Trump sent a Twitter message that seemed to assail the counter-protesters.

“Looks like many antipolice agitators in Boston. Police are looking tough and smart! Thank you,” he tweeted.

Trump has faced condemnati­on from Democrats, Republican­s, the business community and others for blaming both sides for the violence in Charlottes­ville. (Later Saturday afternoon, Trump sent a followup tweet to “applaud the many protestors in Boston who are speaking out against bigotry and hate. Our country will soon come together as one!”)

Demonstrat­ions to show solidarity with Charlottes­ville and to push back against racism were planned Saturday across the U.S., including in New Orleans and Dallas. Authoritie­s in both cities said they planned to deploy extra officers.

But Boston was ground zero for the demonstrat­ions on Saturday.

Far-right activist Kyle Chapman, a Bay Area resident, was among those who spoke at the Boston rally. He’s the founder of the Fraternal Order of Alt-Knights, a fringe group that has shown up to rallies prepared to fight. He was arrested earlier this year after he clashed with protesters in Berkeley.

“I will not stand down,” said Chapman, whose speech was streamed on his Periscope account. “As long as I’m free, I will continue to show up at these rallies, and I will continue to support my right-wing brothers and sisters.”

Evans, who has been police commission­er since 2014, said “99.9% of the people here were here for the right reason.”

“And that’s to fight bigotry and hate,” he said.

 ?? Michael Dwyer Associated Press ?? A TRUMP supporter argues with a counter-protester after being hit by a water bottle in Boston.
Michael Dwyer Associated Press A TRUMP supporter argues with a counter-protester after being hit by a water bottle in Boston.

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