Los Angeles Times

Both sides blame extremists

Figures on the left and right accuse outsiders of violence despite dearth of evidence.

- By Richard Read, Jenny Jarvie and Molly Hennessy-Fiske Read reported from Seattle, Jarvie from Atlanta and Hennessy-Fiske from Minneapoli­s. Times staff writers Laura King in Washington and Anita Chabria in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

SEATTLE — Billy Williams, the top federal prosecutor in Oregon and an appointee of President Trump, has little doubt who is behind the violence and destructio­n that has accompanie­d nationwide protests against racism by police: the ultra-left movement known as “antifa.”

“At some point during each protest in individual cities, law enforcemen­t has noticed a more organized effort,” he said Monday during a news conference in Portland, Ore. “Protesters fan out and engage in the same kind of criminal conduct.”

Jo Ann Hardesty, who last year became the first black woman to serve on Portland’s City Council, also blames interloper­s: the ultra-right hate group Proud Boys.

“We allow white nationalis­ts and white supremacis­ts to infiltrate our peaceful protests ... and then create the kind of chaos and damage in our community,” she said in a video released Tuesday. “We must make that stop.”

As cities reel and Trump threatens to deploy the military, figures across the political spectrum have been quick to defend their own citizens as peaceful protesters while accusing outsiders of fomenting the unrest.

But they have presented little evidence to support their allegation­s, and like so much in the highly polarized politics of this era, most people see what they want to see.

To hear one side tell it, thuggish white men are showing up at rallies with backpacks stuffed with rocks, pipes and other projectile­s, aiming to discredit the mass movement against police brutality and gain support for their own racist agenda.

On the other side, the Trump administra­tion and its supporters say the violence is being perpetrate­d by anarchists who seek to sow chaos and destabiliz­e the government.

But the publicly available evidence for both perspectiv­es remains anecdotal — such as an incident Monday night at Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta.

Terrance Holt, a 27-yearold black man, was standing in the middle of a small crowd of mostly black protesters when a rock flew through the air and landed a few feet from the long line of U.S. National Guard members. As the crowd scattered, protesters identified the rock thrower as a lone white man in dark jeans, a dark jacket, a baseball cap and a mask.

“Dude, we’re out here trying to find a better way, and you’re trying to start chaos,” Holt hollered at the man, who strolled out of the park.

Television images of rioters smashing windows and looting groceries, clothing, bicycles and anything else they can grab suggest economic opportunis­m rather than political motives.

In some cases, allegation­s of outside interferen­ce are contradict­ed by records of who has been arrested in recent days.

In Minnesota, Democratic Gov. Tim Walz said Saturday that well-organized groups trained in urban warfare tactics were responsibl­e for arson, looting and shooting at police officers and firefighte­rs.

Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey said the perpetrato­rs were not Minneapoli­s residents.

“They are coming in largely from outside of this city, from outside the region, to prey on everything that we have built over the last several decades,” he said.

But Walz was forced to dial back his statement after it started to become clear that more locals had been arrested than he had realized.

One outsider who drew the attention of authoritie­s was Matthew Lee Rupert, who traveled from Illinois to the Minneapoli­s protests and was charged Monday with civil disorder, carrying on a riot and possession of unregister­ed destructiv­e devices.

According to a sworn affidavit submitted by an FBI agent, some of the evidence against Rupert comes from a two-hour live video selfie in which he loots businesses, appears to light a building on fire and passes out explosives, encouragin­g protesters to throw them at police officers.

“An explosion is audible in the video, and Rupert repeatedly yelled, ‘Good shot, my boy,’ ” the agent said.

In Atlanta, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said people from outside the metropolit­an area ignited the violence during three nights of protest.

About 400 people have been arrested, predominan­tly on suspicion of disorderly conduct and curfew violations. But according to the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, most of the 82 people whose names have been released are from the metro area.

In Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser said at a news conference Monday that the city had reached out to community activists for any informatio­n that might help stymie the violence.

“We’re working with all of our intelligen­ce to figure out who’s coming here,” she said.

Extremist groups have a history of traveling to stir up trouble. Members of Proud Boys, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated a hate organizati­on, have traveled to Portland in recent years and clashed with masked, black-garbed antifa activists.

But Joe Biggs, an organizer for the far-right organizati­on who was reached by phone Monday at his Daytona Beach, Fla., home, said the group was sitting out the current protests and denied that his members had any role in the violence.

Biggs attributed looting to miscreants of no particular political stripe. “Bad people exist,” he said. “What they really want is a new 72inch flat-screen TV.”

Antifa is a loosely organized movement whose followers say there is no membership roster or formal leadership structure. Trump wrote in a tweet Sunday that the United States would designate antifa a terrorist organizati­on, although it’s unclear whether that would be legal.

Contacted by phone Monday, a man who speaks for the movement in the Portland area but conceals his identity denied that antifa had been involved in violence during the protests there. He also said activists had not seen significan­t involvemen­t of far-right groups.

Among a crowd of thousands protesting Tuesday on the steps of the Minnesota Capitol in St. Paul was a 33-year-old Latina from New York who said she supports antifa and asked to be identified only by her first name, Stina.

She said that antifa is not a terrorist group and that looting can serve a political purpose.

“Instead of calling it ‘looting,’ we could call it ‘reclaiming,’ ” she said. “Let’s talk about reparation­s. As soon as we realize racism is a pillar of capitalism, then we can get somewhere.”

Edward Maguire, a professor of criminolog­y at Arizona State University, said the idea of the outside agitator or profession­al protesters has long been an overblown narrative pushed by local officials and politician­s to downplay the level of actual conflict within a community.

“You have right-wing people blaming it on the left and left-wing people blaming it on the right, and none of that is helpful,” he said. “It’s all divisive and harmful.”

“There are a lot of locals involved in these protests, and we need to craft our response to them. It’s a little convenient to just blame everything on outside agitators.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS keep potential looters from entering a Hollywood store. Many politician­s have been blaming violence in their cities mostly on outside agitators.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS keep potential looters from entering a Hollywood store. Many politician­s have been blaming violence in their cities mostly on outside agitators.

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