The Denver Post

GUNFIRE AT DENVER RALLIES LEAVES 1 DEAD

Dccording to police, shooting suspect is private security guard unrelated to antifa

- By Sam Tabachnik and Saja Hindi

One person has died and another man is in custody after a shooting during dueling protests Saturday in downtown Denver, according to police.

9News reported that one of its employees and a contractor for the television station have been taken into custody and that the station has “not been in contact with either and does not know where either currently is.”

Police initially said two people were taken into custody but later said one of those people was not involved in the incident.

The incident occurred after a man participat­ing in what was billed a “Patriot Rally” sprayed mace at another man. That man then shot the other individual with a handgun near the courtyard outside the Denver Art Museum, according to a Denver Post journalist who witnessed the incident.

Police later tweeted: “Further investigat­ion has determined the suspect is a private security guard with no affiliatio­n with Antifa. Additional informatio­n will be released as it becomes available.”

9News then announced that a private security guard hired by the television station was being held as a suspect in the shooting. The station also said one of its producers had been released after police determine he or she was not involved.

In an earlier news conference after the in

cident, division Chief Joe Montoya, said police could not confirm the shooter’s or the victim’s affiliatio­ns but said the incident started as a verbal altercatio­n. Two guns were found at the scene, he said, as well as a mace can.

When asked about the 9News report, Montoya said he could not confirm any connection,

saying only that the department was still interviewi­ng witnesses. One of those witnesses was a Denver Post photojourn­alist.

“We’re hopeful that as soon as possible we can get the factual informatio­n out as to what led to this — who the individual­s in

volved were,” Montoya said. “We’re hopeful that that informatio­n will help kind of calm the waters a little bit.”

The rallies at Civic Center on Saturday came less than a month before a presidenti­al election and amid a global pandemic that has the nation on edge.

Until the shooting, the protests mostly consisted of each group chanting and yelling at one another from across the amphitheat­er, which separated the two groups.

The right- wing protesters — led by John Tiegen, an El Paso County resident — gathered in the park’s amphitheat­er and occasional­ly chanted patriotic songs and held up banners.

Juan Quinones, a member of the biker gang Sons of Silence, decided to attend the right- wing rally after seeing Tiegan’s event posted online. He arrived after police had closed off the amphitheat­er but stayed with other right- leaning protesters.

Quinones said he wasn’t attending the event to start trouble but he would defend himself if he was attacked. He blamed violence on the left.

“If you don’t come out and listen and talk and speak, then they win,” he said.

The left- wing group — which organizers called “BLM- Antifa Soup Drive” — held up flags and signs railing against Nazis and white supremacis­ts as they gathered in the middle of the park, several hundred feet from the barricaded­off amphitheat­er.

An hour in, police had fired what appeared to be pepper balls after people from the leftist group started rattling a barrier headed into the amphitheat­er.

The soup drive idea appealed to Isabel Difrancesc­a, who said she came out because she liked the idea to help low- income folks. She brought pasta but said she was apprehensi­ve about what she has seen online in anticipati­on of events.

Richard Johnson and Amy Thompson were walking by the amphitheat­er when they passed by the rally.

“America, by and large, if you look at the media, thinks that most of America is for defunding the police and is the hard liberal left and wants to riot in the street, and I personally don’t believe the numbers bear that out,” Johnson said.

Barb Galinsky of Denver said she attended the counterpro­test because “nobody is judge, jury and executione­r and we need to go forward and not backward.” She said white supremacis­t groups represent moving backward.

Galinsky said she expected violence at the event Saturday “because that’s what ( the right- wing groups) want.”

James Rotten was manning the table of books about communism at the rally and the soup drive as a response to the original rally planned. He led chants such as, “No cops, no KKK, no fascist USA.”

“We think every far- right rally like this wants to be a dangerous race riot,” he said.

In anticipati­on of the heightened tensions, Denver police said the department “respects the right to peacefully assemble. Those who participat­e in protests, demonstrat­ions, marches, or other gatherings, as protected by the First Amendment, are reminded to do so in a lawful manner. Individual­s who choose to act outside of local, state and federal law, will be subject to citation or arrest.”

 ?? Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? The man at left was supporting the “Patriot Rally” on Saturday in downtown Denver and sprayed mace at the man at right. The man at right then shot and killed the protester at left.
Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post The man at left was supporting the “Patriot Rally” on Saturday in downtown Denver and sprayed mace at the man at right. The man at right then shot and killed the protester at left.
 ??  ?? A man who police described in a tweet as a “private security guard with no affiliatio­n with Antifa” is taken into custody immediatel­y after the shooting.
A man who police described in a tweet as a “private security guard with no affiliatio­n with Antifa” is taken into custody immediatel­y after the shooting.

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