New York Daily News

TRUMP STANDS BY HIS BLATHER

‘Fact’ challenged Don not sorry for slap at protester

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

The leader of the free world can’t stop kicking this man while he’s down.

President Trump “does not regret” promoting a false conspiracy theory about a 75year-old cancer survivor who split his skull open after officers shoved him during a recent protest against police brutality in upstate New York, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Wednesday.

In a briefing from the White House, McEnany said Trump was just “asking questions” when he posted a tweet on Tuesday that claimed the Buffalo protester, Martin Gugino, may have been an “Antifa provocateu­r” trying to “scan police communicat­ions.” “The president was asking questions about the interactio­n, and he has the right to ask those questions,” press secretary McEnany told reporters. “He does not regret standing up for that.”

Gugino, a longtime peace activist in the Buffalo area, remains hospitaliz­ed. The cops who shoved him have been suspended and charged with assault.

A video of the shocking incident shows Gugino approachin­g a large group of officers during a George Floyd protest when a couple of them take a step forward and push him in the chest, prompting the septuagena­rian to fall and slam the back of his head against the pavement. A pool of blood can be seen forming around Gugino’s ears in the video.

But Trump insisted in his Tuesday tweet that Gugino “fell harder” than he “was pushed” and questioned whether the video could’ve been “a setup.”

Pressed by a reporter as to how that claim made sense from a physics standpoint, McEnany said the president had “facts” on his side.

“The president raised several questions based on a report he saw,” McEnany said. “He was making no judgment, not condoning violence. He is standing back and saying, ‘We need to ask questions before we destroy lives and convict people.’ ”

Kelly Zarcone, an attorney for Gugino, did not return a request for comment on McEnany’s remarks.

Earlier Wednesday, Zarcone said her client had been released into the rehabilita­tion wing of an upstate

hospital and expects to be discharged within the next two weeks.

The report McEnany referenced was a segment produced by the far-right One America News network, which has a history of peddling unfounded conspiracy theories.

The One America News report offered no evidence for the claim that Gugino was spying on police, and the man’s friends and relatives say he has no affiliatio­n to Antifa, a left-wing movement demonized by Trump and other conservati­ves. Notably, the reporter who produced the segment is a former employee of Sputnik, the Kremlin-controlled media outlet that the U.S. intelligen­ce community says Russia used to interfere in the 2016 election.

Gugino’s friends remained flabbergas­ted by Trump’s continued conspiracy-mongering.

“I just can’t understand that someone seeing that video doesn’t feel compassion and concern for this victim of police brutality, but try to find some sort of way of blaming him instead,” Keith Giles, who’s known Gugino for over a decade, told the Daily News.

Giles said Gugino has struggled with cancer for a few years and was at a loss for words over Trump’s “Antifa” accusation.

“He’s a human being and a real person,” Giles said. “I would hope the president would step back and recognize that.”

For the fifth day in a row, Trump did not make himself available to take questions from reporters on Wednesday.

During a brief public appearance before a private event at the White House, Trump announced he plans to hold his first campaign rally in three months next Friday. He then griped about how media coverage about him is “almost 100% negative” before reporters were shepherded out of the room without being allowed to ask questions.

Pivoting away from Gugino, McEnany said during her briefing that Trump is stringentl­y opposed to renaming military bases named after Confederat­e leaders.

“That is unacceptab­le to the president and rightfully so,” McEnany said.

Calls for renaming U.S. military bases honoring Confederat­e generals have mounted anew in the wake of mass protests over Floyd’s death at the hands of a white police officer in Minneapoli­s.

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 ??  ?? President Trump Wednesday stood by comments he made that protester Martin Gugino could be an Antifa radical, although there is no such evidence. Gugino (inset) was sent sprawling to the sidewalk after being pushed by Buffalo cops Aaron Torgalski and Robert McCabe (left and right below).
President Trump Wednesday stood by comments he made that protester Martin Gugino could be an Antifa radical, although there is no such evidence. Gugino (inset) was sent sprawling to the sidewalk after being pushed by Buffalo cops Aaron Torgalski and Robert McCabe (left and right below).
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