Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

D.C. rout called unprovoked

Guardsman to testify about it before House committee

- ELLEN KNICKMEYER

The U.S. Park Police and Secret Service violently routed protesters from Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., last month without apparent provocatio­n or adequate warning, immediatel­y after Attorney General William Barr spoke with Park Police leaders, according to an Army National Guard officer who was there.

The account of National Guard Maj. Adam DeMarco challenges the Trump administra­tion’s explanatio­n for why federal forces clubbed and punched protesters, and unleashed mounted officers and chemical agents to drive hundreds of people from the square in front of the White House on June 1.

The offensive against protesters came just before President Donald Trump walked through the area to stage a photo event in front of a historic church.

DeMarco’s account was released in written testimony for his scheduled appearance today before the House Natural Resources Committee, which is investigat­ing the use of force — and who directed it — against what had appeared to be largely peaceful crowds in the square that night.

The National Guard officer is expected to invoke the Military Whistleblo­wer Protection Act, which says no one can block a member of the armed forces from lawful communicat­ions with Congress.

Committee Chairman Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., said Monday that from DeMarco’s written testimony, “it’s pretty obvious that at the highest levels the calls were being made,” although the testimony does not give any explicit details of anyone giving orders.

The Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment, but has previously denied that law enforcemen­t and security forces cleared the square to make way for Trump’s appearance before news cameras. The incident came near the height of the latest nationwide protests over the killings of Black people at the hands of police.

“From what I could observe, the demonstrat­ors were behaving peacefully,” when Park Police, the Secret Service and other, unidentifi­ed forces turned on the crowd, DeMarco writes. The rout started shortly after Barr and Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appeared in the square, where Barr appeared to confer with Park Police leaders, he says.

The legally required warnings to demonstrat­ors before clearing the square shortly after were “barely audible” from 20 yards away and didn’t appear to have been noticed by protesters, he said.

Park Police and other officers then began suddenly routing the crowd without warning to National Guard forces present, DeMarco said.

A Park Police liaison officer told DeMarco that his forces were using only “stage smoke,” not tear gas, against the crowd. DeMarco said the stinging to his nose and eyes appeared to be tear gas, however, and he found spent tear gas canisters in the street later that evening.

The National Park Service, which oversees the U.S. Park Police, responded by repeating Park Police head Gregory Monahan’s statement last month that his officers acted to “curtail the violence that was underway.”

The Park Police, a force of a few hundred officers nationwide, oversees a handful of the nation’s most iconic federal lands and monuments. Monahan is also scheduled to testify at today’s committee hearing.

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