The Commercial Appeal

FANNING FUROR

Woman pulls down Confederat­e banner hours before pro-flag rally at S.C. statehouse

- Associated Press By Emily Masters and Bruce Smith

The Confederat­e flag was temporaril­y removed from the front of the South Carolina Statehouse on Saturday when a woman climbed the flagpole and — despite calls by police to get down — removed the banner.

Bree Newsome, 30, of Charlotte, North Carolina, was about halfway up the more than 30-foot steel flagpole just after dawn Saturday when officers of the South Carolina Bureau of Protective Services ran to the flagpole and told her to get down. Instead, she continued climbing to the top and removed the flag.

She and a man who had climbed over a 4-foot wroughtiro­n fence to get to the flag were arrested.

The flag, which is protected by state law, was raised about 45 minutes later, well ahead of a rally later Saturday by supporters of keeping the flag where it is.

Sherri Iacobelli, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Public Safety, said Newsome and James Ian Tyson, 30, also of Charlotte, have been charged with defacing monuments on state Capitol grounds. That’s a misdemeano­r that carries a fine of up to $5,000, a prison term of up to three years or both.

A staff member at the Alvin Glenn Detention Center, where the two were taken, said she did not know if they had attorneys.

About the time of her arrest, Newsome released an email statement to the media.

“We removed the flag today because we can’t wait any longer. We can’t continue like this another day,” it said. “It’s time for a new chapter where we are sincere about dismantlin­g white supremacy and building toward true racial justice and equality.”

Later Saturday, about 50 people who support keeping the flag held a rally at the statehouse. Many were waving Confederat­e flags as they shouted, “Heritage Not Hate!”

“This is not a flag of hate. It’s a flag of heritage, and we have a right to our heritage,” said Leland Browder of Greenville. “And, you know, I’m from the South and proud of the South and, you know, proud of this flag.”

Supporters also said the voters should decide the fate of the flag.

Calls for removing the flag have been renewed since nine black churchgoer­s were killed in what police characteri­zed as a racist attack at a Charleston, South Carolina, church last week.

South Carolina lawmakers took the initial steps last Tuesday toward removing the Confederat­e battle flag from the Statehouse grounds by agreeing to allow discussion of the matter during the legislativ­e session.

The agreement came a day after Republican Gov. Nikki Haley called for the flag to come down.

 ?? BRUCE SMITH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of keeping the Confederat­e battle flag flying at the South Carolina Statehouse rally Saturday in front of the statehouse in Columbia. Earlier Saturday, a woman climbed the flagpole and temporaril­y removed the banner.
BRUCE SMITH/ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of keeping the Confederat­e battle flag flying at the South Carolina Statehouse rally Saturday in front of the statehouse in Columbia. Earlier Saturday, a woman climbed the flagpole and temporaril­y removed the banner.

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