Los Angeles Times

Virginia gun rally draws armed right-wing groups

Activists ignore firearms-free zone two days before inaugurati­on, but police don’t intervene

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

RICHMOND, Va. — Despite fears of violence and a country on edge ahead of the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden, gun rights activists rallied outside the Virginia Capitol on Monday, drawing in rightwing groups increasing­ly hostile toward the government and openly armed in defiance of the law.

They came to Richmond f lying f lags and shouting slogans, a volatile collection of extremists and militants whose politics and rancor have unsettled the nation in recent weeks. Among the first to arrive were the Boogaloo Bois, then the white nationalis­t Proud Boys, the Black Panthers and several Virginia militias. All brandished AR-15-style rifles and deep suspicions that Democrats under Biden would tighten gun regulation­s.

Some armed activists gathered outside the cordoned-off Capitol, ignoring a gun-free zone where protesters were not supposed to openly carry firearms. Dozens of Capitol, city and state police patrolled along metal barricades but didn’t confront the protesters.

The annual rally — held on the state Legislatur­e’s lobbying day — usually draws more than 20,000 people but was scaled back by the grass-roots Virginia Citizens Defense League this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some stood shoulder to shoulder, but hundreds of other gun rights proponents from across the state drove in caravans in solidarity through the streets of this former Confederat­e capital.

But a united cause quickly gave way to tensions. A dozen Boogaloo Bois, wearing signature Hawaiian shirts and patches revealing their alliance with Black Lives Matter, cheered as Black Panthers marched past. The Proud Boys taunted the Boogaloo Bois. The Panthers condemned America’s racist past even as others in the crowd blamed the Black Lives Matter movement for defacing Confederat­e monuments. Some decried the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol in support of President Trump while others said they had participat­ed in it.

Tom Speciale, 52, a government contractor and Army veteran, said he feared a movement by liberals to regulate guns would gain momentum under Biden.

“If they can disarm you,” he said, “they can control you.”

Speciale joined the Jan. 6 rally in support of Trump, but he said he didn’t break into the U.S. Capitol with others in the mob, adding that those who did should be investigat­ed for “potentiall­y criminal acts.”

“People’s passions are very high,” Speciale said. “They ultimately got taken advantage of by agitators.”

Throughout Monday afternoon, in a city that once epitomized the Old South, men and women with rifles stood their ground about 100 miles from the White House. The nation’s fault lines were evident. Trump was not a focus of the rally, but he loomed large and the divisions and rage he incites resonated. It raised questions — on a national holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. — about the threats far-right extremism and white supremacy pose in an era of widening demands for civil rights and racial justice.

When an armed protester arrived waving a transgende­r-friendly flag, a militia member accused him of being a pedophile. A few Proud Boys also jeered at him at first, then decided he was on their side. Tempers flared when different groups converged, but they never came to blows.

“Proud Boys, go home!” a Boogaloo Boi shouted at one point.

“Say it to my face!” a Proud Boy yelled back.

Police watched from a distance and didn’t intervene.

A few in the crowd wore Make America Great Again hats, but many more said they didn’t support Trump, including Mike Dunn, a libertaria­n local leader of the Boogaloo Bois. Dunn, 20, said he attended the rally in defiance of the local ordinance passed by the City Council and backed by the state Legislatur­e last year barring armed protests. “It’s my Capitol,” he said. He wasn’t deterred by federal officials investigat­ing Boogaloo Bois and warning the group might target state capitals after the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol: “They’ve been going after us for years,” Dunn said as he stood with fellow Boogaloo Bois wearing camouflage, a Hawaiian print mask and toting a rifle.

He said he wasn’t afraid of police standing nearby either, despite signs around downtown warning that openly carrying guns was prohibited by law.

“They will not arrest us,” Dunn said. He was right.

During a brief appearance at the rally, the leader of the Virginia Citizens Defense League said he had no problem with the Boogaloo Bois and Proud Boys joining the event. “They have a right to be here,” Philip Van Cleave said.

He was troubled by new gun control laws such as the Richmond gun-free protest ordinance and said it was time to send a message: “Give us our rights back.”

Dunn agreed, but said Van Cleave’s lobbying group wasn’t doing enough to challenge such laws.

“All we do is get tread on!” Dunn shouted to Van Cleave. “They have not solved the issue. The only solution is armed revolt!”

But Dunn made no move to confront police standing a few feet away. Michael Fouche, a member of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, stared at Dunn and scoffed.

“Nice speech,” muttered Fouche, 54, a remodeling contractor. “Would have meant more if you went to the other side of the barricades.”

After the rally, a local right-wing activist urged gun rights supporters to converge on a nearby monument to Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee, a Virginia native, in the city’s historic Fan District. Black Lives Matter activists had occupied the monument since the summer, transformi­ng it into a memorial to those killed by police.

Police blocked the streets surroundin­g the monument, now covered in graffiti. They stopped a Black man who, according to witnesses, was openly carrying a handgun in a gun-free zone. The law states the weapon should have been concealed. Black Lives Matter supporters, several of them armed, complained police were selectivel­y enforcing gun laws, allowing right-wing activists to threaten them.

“It’s been like that,” said Kyra, 30, who asked to be identified only by her first name. “We’re not going anywhere.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? BLACK PANTHERS join other gun rights activists at a rally in Richmond, Va. Boogaloo Bois cheered as they marched past, drawing taunts from Proud Boys.
Photograph­s by Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times BLACK PANTHERS join other gun rights activists at a rally in Richmond, Va. Boogaloo Bois cheered as they marched past, drawing taunts from Proud Boys.
 ??  ?? MEMBERS of the Boogaloo Bois stand their ground. The annual rally usually draws more than 20,000 people but was scaled back this year due to the pandemic.
MEMBERS of the Boogaloo Bois stand their ground. The annual rally usually draws more than 20,000 people but was scaled back this year due to the pandemic.

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