Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gun-rights activists gearing up for Virginia

State government plans slate of gun restrictio­ns, provoking backlash

- Alan Suderman and Denise Lavoie

RICHMOND, Va. – Police are scouring the internet for clues about plans for mayhem, workers are putting up chain link holding pens around Virginia’s picturesqu­e Capitol Square, and one lawmaker even plans to hide in a safe house in advance of what’s expected to be an unpreceden­ted show of force by gun-rights activists.

What is provoking their anger in this once reliably conservati­ve state is the new Democratic majority leadership and its plans to enact a slew of gun restrictio­ns. This clash of old and new has made Virginia – determined to prevent a replay of the Charlottes­ville violence in 2017 – ground zero in the nation’s raging debate over gun control.

The Virginia Citizens Defense League’s yearly rally at the Capitol typically draws just a few hundred gun enthusiast­s. This year, however, thousands of gun activists are expected to turn out. Second Amendment groups have identified the state as a rallying point for the fight against what they see as a national erosion of gun rights.

“We’re not going to be quiet anymore. We’re going to fight them in the courts and on the ground. The illegal laws they’re proposing are just straight up unconstitu­tional,” said Timothy Forster of Chesterfield, an NRA member who had one handgun strapped to his shoulder and another tucked into his waistband as he stood outside a legislativ­e office building earlier this week.

Defense league president Philip Van Cleave said he’s heard from groups around the country that plan to send members to Virginia, including the Nevadabase­d far-right Oath Keepers, which has promised to organize and train armed posses and militia.

Extremist groups have blanketed social media and online forums with ominous messages and hinted at potential violence. The FBI said it arrested three men linked to a violent white supremacis­t group Thursday who were planning to attend the rally in Richmond, according to a law enforcemen­t official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss an active investigat­ion.

Democrats have banned guns inside the Capitol, and Gov. Ralph Northam declared a temporary state of emergency Wednesday that bans all weapons, including guns, from Capitol Square, during the rally to prevent “armed militia groups storming our Capitol.” Gunrights groups asked the Virginia Supreme Court to rule Northam’s declaratio­n unconstitu­tional, but the court upheld the ban Friday.

The governor said some of the rhetoric used by groups planning to attend Monday’s rally is reminiscen­t of that used ahead of the white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville in August 2017. One woman was killed and more than 30 other people were hurt when a white supremacis­t drove his car into a crowd of counter protesters there.

The Virginia State Police, the Virginia Capitol Police and the Richmond Police are all coordinati­ng the event and have plans for a huge police presence at Monday’s rally that will include both uniformed and plaincloth­es officers. Police plan to limit access to Capitol Square to only one entrance and have warned rally-goers that they may have to wait hours to get past security screening.

Nonessenti­al state staff were being told to stay away. Delegate Lee Carter, a Democratic Socialist, said he’s planning to spend Monday at an undisclose­d location because of threats he has received.

“I ain’t interested in martyrdom,” Carter tweeted. Northam lamented that such precaution­s were necessary for what’s been a peaceful yearly event, but said pro-gun activists have “unleashed something larger, something they may not be able to control.”

The pushback against proposed new gun restrictio­ns began immediatel­y after Democrats won majorities in both the state Senate and House of Delegates in November. Much of the opposition has focused on a proposed assault weapons ban, which would affect thousands of owners of AR-15-style rifles. One version of the bill, which Democrats later disavowed, would have required current owners of the rifles to turn them in or face felony charges.

That bill was the spark that created the massive pushback, according to Sen. Creigh Deeds, one of the few moderate Democrats left in Virginia who represents rural areas.

“That allowed people who like to inflame passions to say, ‘Look, they’re really coming after your guns, they’re coming after you,’ ” Deeds said.

Thousands of gun owners from around the state packed municipal meetings to urge local officials to declare their communitie­s “Second Amendment Sanctuarie­s” opposed to “unconstitu­tional” gun restrictio­ns like universal background checks. More than 125 cities, towns and counties have approved sanctuary resolution­s in Virginia.

Gun-control advocates, meanwhile, have also been flocking to Richmond to show their support for the proposed legislatio­n. with Moms Demand Action held a rally on Jan. 6. Gun control became a leading issue in the 2019 Virginia legislativ­e elections after a city employee in Virginia Beach opened fire on his co-workers in May, killing 12 and injuring four others.

Janet Woody, a retired librarian from Richmond and a Moms volunteer, said she believes the proposed package of legislatio­n can help reduce gun violence.

“I just feel so angry and helpless because of all these massacres,” she said. “You can call your legislator or write, but there comes a point where you just have to get out in the street.”

 ?? MAHONEY/RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH VIA AP JOE ?? Barriers are set up at the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond on Saturday in anticipati­on of a rally by a large number of gun-rights backers Monday.
MAHONEY/RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH VIA AP JOE Barriers are set up at the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond on Saturday in anticipati­on of a rally by a large number of gun-rights backers Monday.

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