The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Peaceful events, security mark anniversar­y

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — Charlottes­ville, Va., was marking the anniversar­y of last summer’s white supremacis­t violence with marches, vigils and other community events that began unfolding peacefully Saturday amid a heavy police presence.

As many businesses in a popular downtown shopping district began to open Saturday, law enforcemen­t officers outnumbere­d visitors. Concrete barriers and metal fences had been erected, and police were searching bags at two checkpoint­s where people could enter or leave.

“It’s nice that they’re here to protect us,” said Lara Mitchell, 66, a sales associate at a shop that sells artwork, jewelry and other items. “It feels good that they’re here in front of our store. Last year was a whole different story. It looked like a war zone last year compared to what it is today.”

Saturday marked the anniversar­y of a nighttime march by torch-toting white supremacis­ts through the University of Virginia’s campus a day ahead of a larger rally in Charlottes­ville’s downtown.

On Aug. 12, hundreds of white nationalis­ts — including neo-Nazis, skinheads and Ku Klux Klan members — descended on Charlottes­ville in part to protest the city’s decision decided to remove a monument to Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee from a park.

Violent fighting broke out between attendees and counterpro­testers that day. Authoritie­s eventually forced the crowd to disperse, but a car later barreled into a crowd of peaceful counterpro­testers, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

The day’s death toll rose to three when a state police helicopter that had been monitoring the event and assisting with the governor’s motorcade crashed, killing two troopers.

Among the remembranc­e events that occurred Saturday was a “morning of reflection and renewal” at UVA that featured musical performanc­es, a poetry reading and an address from University President James Ryan.

Ryan recalled how a group of students and community members faced off against the white supremacis­t marchers near a statue of Thomas Jefferson on campus, calling it a “remarkable moment of courage and bravery.”

Clara Carlson was one of those counterpro­testers. Carlson, 22, said she feared for her life when she and a group of her friends were surrounded by the phalanx of young white men at the statue.

Carlson’s group locked arms and chanted slogans of their own, including “Black Lives Matter!” and “No Nazis, No KKK, No Fascist USA!”

“We don’t want to be painted as victims,” Carlson said Saturday, several hours before students and activists gathered for a rally near the statue on the anniversar­y of the campus confrontat­ion. Carlson said police didn’t intervene to help her or her friends that night last year.

“I remember the police just standing around. They weren’t there to protect us,” she recalled. “I was grateful that I was able to come out of that alive.”

On Saturday, however, campus security personnel used metal detectors to screen rally participan­ts and journalist­s before they entered the university’s famed Rotunda. A helicopter buzzed overhead. Large trucks blocked off the nearby roads.

By midafterno­on, the city said hundreds of people had passed through the downtown checkpoint­s. Police arrested three men in or near the secured perimeter for trespassin­g, possessing prohibited items and being drunk in public, the city said in a news release.

Some community activists were concerned that this year’s heavy police presence could be a counterpro­ductive overreacti­on.

An independen­t investigat­ion of the rally violence, led by a former federal prosecutor, found the chaos last year stemmed from a passive response by law enforcemen­t and poor preparatio­n and coordinati­on between state and city police.

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