Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Charlottes­ville police criticized for slow response to violence

- By Peter Hermann, Joe Heim and Ellie Silverman

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — Police in Charlottes­ville, Va., came under criticism for failing to keep apart warring white nationalis­ts and counter-protesters who battled it out in the city streets on Saturday amid what at first seemed an anemic response from authoritie­s.

Anger over the how police responded came from all directions and intensifie­d after the deaths of a woman struck by a car that plowed into a group of counter protesters. Experts said police appeared outnumbere­d, ill-prepared and inexperien­ced.

“The worst part is that people got hurt and the police stood by and didn’t do a thing,” said David Copper, 70, of Staunton, Va., after an initial morning melee at a park that when unchecked by police for several minutes.

Cable news replayed a seemingly endless loop of the early violence at Emancipati­on-Park, where police in riot gear had surrounded the expanse on three sides, though seemed to watch as groups beat each other with sticks and bludgeoned one another with shields. Many on both sides came dressed for battle, with helmets and chem-ical irritants.

Police appeared at one point to retreat and then watch the beatings before eventually moving in to end the free-for-all, make arrests and tend the injured. The governor declared a state of emergency around 11 a.m. and activated the National Guard.

“The whole point is to have overwhelmi­ng force so that people don’t get the idea they can do these kinds of things and get away with it,” said Charles Ramsey, who headed both the District of Columbia and Philadelph­ia police department­s. Demonstrat­ors and counter demonstrat­ors “need to be in sight and sound of each other but somebody has to be in between,” he said. “That’s usually the police.”

Complicati­ng the dynamics was the fact that several dozen groups of armed militia — men in full camouflage toting assaultsty­le weapons — were in the middle of the crowds. Some claimed that they were there to keep the peace, although none were seen trying to stop the skirmishes.

Cornel West, the Princeton professor and writer who attended a morning church service at First Baptist Church in Charlottes­ville with a large group of clergy members, said “the police didn’t do anything in terms of protecting the people of the community, the clergy.” Mr. West said that “if it hadn’t been for the anti fascists protecting us from the neo-fascists, we would have been crushed like cockroache­s.”

Richard Spencer, the white nationalis­t and one of the leaders of the rally, said police failed to protect groups with which he is affiliated. “We came here as a demonstrat­ion of our movement,” Mr. Spencer said. “And we were effectivel­y thrown to the wolves.” The police, he said, “did not protect us.”

Local and state authoritie­s declined to address specific questions about how the demonstrat­ion was handled or their strategy for the day. The city’s mayor, police chief, city manager, and Gov. Terry McAuliffe also did not answer questions at an early evening news conference.

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