The Denver Post

Emergency declared before Charlottes­ville anniversar­y

- By Alan Suderman

RICHMOND, VA.» Gov. Ralph Northam and the city of Charlottes­ville on Wednesday declared a state of emergency before the one-year anniversar­y of a violent white nationalis­t rally that left one person dead and dozens of others injured.

Officials said the declaratio­n would streamline state and local operations this weekend while also allocating $2 million of state funds. The declaratio­n authorizes the Virginia National Guard to assist in security efforts.

Law enforcemen­t officials said there will be a heavy police presence meant to deter any violence.

Virginia State Police Superinten­dent Gary Settle said more than 700 state police will be activated during the weekend and “state police is fully prepared to act” to prevent any incidents like last year.

Only one organizer of last summer’s rally in Charlottes­ville seems intent on publicly marking the anniversar­y. Jason Kessler has vowed to press ahead with plans for an Aug. 12 rally in Washington, D.C., after Charlottes­ville denied him a permit.

Authoritie­s faced unrelentin­g criticism for their handling of last year’s rally and an independen­t review that found serious police and government failures in responding to violence at the “Unite the Right” rally. It drew hundreds of white nationalis­ts from across the country to the Virginia college town.

Chaos erupted before the event even began, with participan­ts and counterpro­testers brawling in the street. Later, a woman was killed when a car drove into a crowd protesting against the white nationalis­ts, and dozens more were injured.

The man accused in that attack, James Alex Fields of Ohio, has been charged with firstdegre­e murder.

Two state troopers who had been monitoring the event also were killed when their helicopter crashed.

The independen­t review by former U.S. Attorney Tim Heaphy was sharply critical of both the city and state police, saying both “failed to ‘stand up’ to protect human life.

Several city officials left their jobs in the months after the rally. The city attorney took a new job, the city manager’s contract was not renewed, a spokeswoma­n quit and the police chief, who was 50 at the time, retired after less than two years on the job.

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