The Arizona Republic

Few arrested protesters are radical

Review: Many are young adults from suburbs

- Alanna Durkin Richer, Colleen Long and Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump portrays the hundreds of people arrested nationwide in protests against racial injustice as violent urban leftwing radicals. But an Associated Press review of thousands of pages of court documents tells a different story.

Very few of those charged appear to be affiliated with highly organized extremist groups, and many are young suburban adults from the very neighborho­ods Trump vows to protect from the violence in his reelection push to win support from the suburbs.

Attorney General William Barr has urged his prosecutor­s to bring federal charges against protesters who cause violence and has suggested that rarely used sedition charges could apply. And the Department of Justice has pushed for detention even as prisons across the U.S. were releasing high-risk inmates because of COVID-19 and prosecutor­s had been told to consider the risks of incarcerat­ion during a pandemic when seeking detention.

Defense attorneys and civil rights activists are questionin­g why the Department of Justice has taken on cases to begin with. They say most belong in state court, where defendants typically get much lighter sentences. And they argue federal authoritie­s appear to be cracking down on protesters in an effort to stymie demonstrat­ions.

“It is highly unusual, and

without precedent in recent American history,” said Ron Kuby, a longtime attorney who has represente­d scores of clients over the years in protest-related incidents. “Almost all of the conduct that’s being charged is conduct that, when it occurs, is prosecuted at the state and local level,” he said.

Not to say there hasn’t been violence. Police cars have been set on fire. Officers have been injured and blinded. Windows have been smashed, stores looted, businesses destroyed.

Some of those facing charges undoubtedl­y share far-left and anti-government views. Some have criminal records and were illegally carrying weapons. Others came to the protests from out of state. Some are accused of using the unrest as an opportunit­y to steal or create havoc.

But many have had no previous runins with the law and no apparent ties to antifa, the umbrella term for leftist militant groups that Trump has said he wants to declare part of a terrorist organizati­on.

Even though most of the demonstrat­ions have been peaceful, Trump has made “law and order” a major part of his reelection campaign, casting the protests as lawless and violent in mostly Democratic cities he says have done nothing to stymie the mayhem. Trump has argued that some cities have refused to properly clamp down on protesters, so the federal government has to step in.

“I know about antifa, and I know about the radical left, and I know how violent they are and how vicious they are, and I know how they are burning down cities run by Democrats,” Trump said at an NBC town hall.

In dozens of cases, the government has pushed to keep the protesters behind bars while they await their trials amid the pandemic, which has killed more than 220,000 people across the U.S. There have been more than 16,000 positive cases in the federal prison system, according to a tracker compiled by the AP and The Marshall Project.

In some cases, prosecutor­s have gone so far as appealing judge’s orders to release defendants. Pre-trial detention generally is reserved only for people who are clearly dangers to the community or a risk of fleeing.

In Texas, Federal Magistrate Judge Andrew Austin repeatedly challenged the prosecutor to explain why Cyril Lartigue, who authoritie­s say was found with the materials to make a Molotov cocktail in his backpack, should be behind bars while he awaits his trial. Lartigue, of Cedar Park, described his actions that night as a “flash of stupidity,” prosecutor­s said. Letters filed with the court from friends and family members describe him as caring and honest.

The 25-year-old lives with his parents in the Austin suburb and had never been in trouble with the law before and wasn’t a member of a violent group.

The judge said there are a lot of people “who do something stupid that’s dangerous that we don’t even consider detaining.”

“I have defendants in here with significan­t criminal histories that the government agrees to release,” he said. “We have no evidence of him – at least that’s been given to me – being a radical or a member of a group that advocates violence toward the police or others. … What evidence is there that he’s a danger to society?”

The judge allowed Lartigue to stay out of jail.

While some of the defendants clearly hold radical or anti-government beliefs, prosecutor­s have provided little evidence of any affiliatio­ns they have with organized extremist groups.

A Seattle man who expressed anarchist beliefs on social media was accused of sending a message through a Portland citizen communicat­ion portal threatenin­g to blow up a police precinct. Another shouted anarchist messages at a protest, according to social media.

In Detroit, city leaders have decried suburbanit­es coming into the city and causing havoc.

“If you really want to address these issues, and we stand in solidarity with you, address them in Royal Oak … address them in Dearborn, address them in Grosse Point,” the Rev. Wendell Anthony of the NAACP said in May. “Don’t come down to Detroit and tear the city up and then go back home.”

Along with all the far-left accusation­s, there are far-right cases, too. Three men arrested are members of the “Boogaloo” movement plotting to overthrow the government. They had been stockpilin­g military-grade weapons and hunting around for the right public event to unleash violence for weeks before George Floyd’s death, according to court documents.

More than 40% of those facing federal charges are white. At least one-third are Black, and about 6% Hispanic. More than two-thirds are under the age of 30, and most are men. More than a quarter have been charged with arson, which if they are convicted means a five-year minimum prison sentence. More than a dozen are accused of civil disorder, and others are charged with burglary and failing to comply with a federal order.

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