Arab Times

Trump sued in Kentucky

Touts loyalty

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LOUISVILLE, Ky, April 2, (Agencies): Three people who claim they were assaulted at a Donald Trump rally in Louisville, Kentucky, last month have filed a lawsuit against the Republican presidenti­al candidate, saying he “incited a riot.”

Molly Shah, Kashiya Nwanguma and Henry Brousseau filed the lawsuit on Thursday in Jefferson Circuit Court in Louisville, claiming that Trump’s repeated calls of “get them out” at a rally at the Kentucky Internatio­nal Convention Center on March 1 was intended to direct his supporters to “use unwanted, harmful physical force to remove protesters, including the plaintiffs.”

The lawsuit also names as defendants the Trump campaign and three individual­s who the plaintiffs claim assaulted them at the rally.

The three plaintiffs, all Louisville residents, claim they suffered physical injuries, emotional distress and humiliatio­n, and are seeking unspecifie­d damages, according to the lawsuit.

“Peaceful protest is an American tradition, especially in the context of presidenti­al politics,” Dan Canon, the attorney for the plaintiffs, told Reuters in a Twitter message. “But what you see all over the country, time and time again, is violence employed against protesters at Trump campaign events. These plaintiffs are saying ‘enough is enough,’”

Trump

Stopped

The lawsuit said Trump stopped his 30-minute speech five times to point out protesters and, in most cases, told supporters to “get ‘em out of here,” according to the lawsuit.

A spokeswoma­n for Trump’s campaign could not be reached for comment.

The lawsuit claims that Trump “incited a riot as defined under the Kentucky penal code.”

The individual­s named as defendants are Matthew Heimbach, described in the complaint as a Trump supporter and Ohio resident who is “affiliated with the Traditiona­list Worker Party, a recognized hate group”; Alvin Bamberger, 75, described as a Trump supporter and an Ohio resident; and an unknown female.

According to the lawsuit, at the rally, Heimbach, who was wearing a Traditiona­list Worker Party Tshirt, attacked Shah and Nwanguma. A spokesman for the Traditiona­l Worker Party could not be reached.

A website for the Traditiona­list Worker Party describes it as a grassroots political organizati­on that believes, among other things, that “European-American identity is under constant attack.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center, a non-profit organizati­on that monitors groups it considers extremist, classifies the Traditiona­list Worker Party as a white nationalis­t hate group.

According to the lawsuit, Nwanguma was assaulted by numerous protesters at the rally, of whom Heimbach and Bamberger were the most aggressive. Video of Nwanguma, a 21-year-old college student, being repeatedly pushed at the convention went viral after the rally, the lawsuit said.

Bamberger could not be reached immediatel­y for comment.

The lawsuit also claims that Shah was assaulted by Heimbach and that Brousseau was assaulted by the unknown female defendant.

Donald Trump says his decision to stand behind his campaign manager, who has been charged in an altercatio­n with a female reporter, is a sign of loyalty — a trait that Trump has displayed, for better or worse, through much of his career.

The Republican presidenti­al candidate said in an interview that he wouldn’t have accepted Corey Lewandowsk­i’s resignatio­n even if it had been offered. But he also seemed to acknowledg­e that he’s had a difficult week leading into what could be a crucial primary in Wisconsin on Tuesday.

When asked in a brief phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday whether Lewandowsk­i had offered his resignatio­n this week, Trump replied, “Well I’d rather not say, but it wouldn’t have mattered.”

Lewandowsk­i was charged with simple battery after being accused of grabbing a Breitbart News reporter’s arm after a press conference, an encounter that was captured on surveillan­ce footage.

The incident prompted new concerns about Trump’s ability to appeal to female voters in the general election in November.

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