Observer News Enterprise

North Carolina appeals court upholds ruling that kept Confederat­e monument in place

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina appeals court ruled Tuesday that local leaders who refused calls to remove a Confederat­e monument from outside a county courthouse acted in a constituti­onal manner and kept in place the statue at its longtime location in accordance with state law.

The three-judge panel unanimousl­y upheld a trial court judge’s decision to side with Alamance County and its commission­ers over the 30 foot (9.1 meter)-tall statue, which features a Confederat­e infantryma­n perched at the top. The state NAACP, the Alamance NAACP chapter, and other groups and individual­s had sued the county and its leaders in 2021 after the commission­ers rejected calls to take the statue down.

Confederat­e monuments in North Carolina, as elsewhere nationwide, were a frequent focal point for racial inequality protests in the late 2010s, and particular­ly in 2020 following the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer. North Carolina legislator­s enacted a law in 2015 that limits when an “object of remembranc­e” such as a military monument can be relocated.

The lawsuit’s plaintiffs said the county and the commission­ers violated the state constituti­on by exercising discrimina­tory intent to protect a symbol of white supremacy outside the historic Alamance County Courthouse, thus creating the appearance of racial prejudice there.

In the opinion, Court of Appeals Chief Judge Chris Dillon wrote that the county commission­ers lacked authority under the 2015 law to remove the statue. He also said the county manager’s email to commission­ers in June 2020, in which he asked them to consider removing the monument out of concern for protesters’ safety, did not qualify for an exception to that law.

“At all times,the Monument Protection Law required the County to leave the Monument in its current place,” Dillon wrote. He added that a provision in the state constituti­on intended to ensure state courts are open to the public doesn’t prohibit the placement of objects of historical remembranc­e in and around a courthouse. The courthouse monument was dedicated in 1914.

“Indeed, in many courthouse­s and other government buildings across our State and nation, there are depictions of historical individual­s who held certain views in their time many today would find offensive,” Dillon wrote.

Judges Donna Stroud and Valerie Zachary joined in the opinion.

Even with the 2015 law, Confederat­e monuments in

North Carolina have been taken down in recent years, sometimes through force.

In 2018, protesters tore down a Confederat­e statue known as “Silent Sam” at the University of North Carolina campus at Chapel Hill. Statues of soldiers from the North Carolina Confederat­e Monument on the old Capitol grounds in Raleigh came down in June 2020. Gov. Roy Cooper, citing public safety, directed that the remainder of the monument and two others on Capitol grounds be removed.

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