The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Officials back off removing temporary fencing at White House

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

The Trump administra­tion appears to be retreating from its commitment to quickly remove most of a new fence blocking demonstrat­ors and other members of the public from in front of the White House.

Instead, National Park Service spokeswoma­n Katie Liming says only that her agency is in “continuing discussion­s” with the Secret Service about what Liming called the temporary security fencing at the front of the White House.

Officials abruptly erected the high, black metal fence last week to block demonstrat­ors from Lafayette Square outside the White House. That was as massive crowds rallied in Washington and around the country to protest the killing of George Floyd in police custody, and other deaths of

African Americans at the hands of police.

Members of the park service’s U.S. Park Police and other security forces lobbed chemical agents and punched and clubbed demonstrat­ors and journalist­s in clearing Lafayette Square near the White House on June 1, just before crews raised the new fence. Trump administra­tion officials have denied federal forces at the time of the forceful removal of crowds were making way for President Donald Trump to stage photos nearby.

Lafayette Square has historical­ly been one of the country’s most prominent spots for demonstrat­ions and other public advocacy,

Liming had said at the start of this week that officials would remove “most” of the fence at Lafayette Square on Wednesday.

Liming in her latest update, however, said only that fencing elsewhere, on the south side of the White House, would be removed “on or about” Wednesday.

She did not immediatel­y respond to a question about why the Park Service now appeared to be moving away from its commitment to take down most of the Lafayette Square fence Wednesday.

Separately, three Democratic lawmakers asked federal watchdogs to investigat­e whether the Park Police broke any laws in routing demonstrat­ors from the square.

The request was made in a letter, released Tuesday, to the Interior Department inspector general, Mark Lee Greenblatt, whose department oversees the National Park Service. Officials were in the early stages of reviewing the request, IG spokeswoma­n Nancy Dipaolo said.

The request for an investigat­ion was made by Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, House Natural Resources

Committee Chair Raul Grijalva of Arizona, and Committee Vice Chair Rep. Debra Haaland of New Mexico.

“The First Amendment rights to free speech, peaceful assembly, and free press are the building blocks of all other rights,” the three lawmakers said. “Any actions by the Park Police to muzzle these rights is an affront to all Americans and should be swiftly addressed.”

A force of several hundred officers, the Park Police are charged with law enforcemen­t at Lafayette Square, the Statue of Liberty in New York, and a small number of other heavily visited federal sites.

An Interior Department spokesman, Conner Swanson, called the lawmakers’ accusation­s “an insult to the fine men and women who put their lives on the line to protect our citizens and defend America’s national treasures.”

“The suggestion that the United States Park Police would ‘muzzle’ Americans’ rights is outrageous,” Swanson said.

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt told Grijalva in a letter last week that the Park Police had been in a “state of siege” from violent attacks in the square.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY ?? FILE - In this Monday, June 1, 2020, file photo President Donald Trump walks past police in Lafayette Park after visiting outside St. John’s Church across from the White House in Washington. The violent clearing of demonstrat­ors from the nation’s premier protest space in front of the White House is spotlighti­ng a tiny federal watch force created by George Washington.
PATRICK SEMANSKY FILE - In this Monday, June 1, 2020, file photo President Donald Trump walks past police in Lafayette Park after visiting outside St. John’s Church across from the White House in Washington. The violent clearing of demonstrat­ors from the nation’s premier protest space in front of the White House is spotlighti­ng a tiny federal watch force created by George Washington.

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