The Morning Call

Confrontat­ion on I-676 before Philly curfew

- By Claudia Lauer and Matt Rourke

Hundreds of people protesting the police treatment of black people spilled onto an interstate highway in the heart of Philadelph­ia on Monday afternoon just before a curfew took effect, leading law enforcemen­t to fire nonlethal bullets and tear gas and halting traffic during the evening rush hour.

The crowds on Interstate 676 also led to the closure of the Benjamin Franklin Bridge, the main link from downtown Philadelph­ia to New Jersey suburbs. Some climbed a steep embankment and scaled a fence as police acted.

More than two dozen were arrested as a few hundred other protesters moved to block the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, a grand thoroughfa­re leading from downtown to the city’s imposing art museum.

The confrontat­ion came after the National Guard stationed vehicles outside City Hall and other downtown buildings, officials curtailed public transit, and city leaders

put a curfew in effect for a third day Monday after a weekend of destructio­n that led to more than 400 arrests.

A few hundred protesters were forced down Benjamin Franklin Parkway toward City Hall after the interstate demonstrat­ion. Many went to the police headquarte­rs known as the Round House on Arch Street, where a line of National Guard members and police officers stood watch on the stairs.

Shortly before 7 p.m., a little more than half decided to take a knee as a sign to protesters. Many cheered and video taped the officers on one knee at the top of the stairs. Afterward, many of the protesters left, but others slowly milled about outside the station.

The Monday curfew was 6 p.m., the same as the day before and two hours earlier than Saturday. The city closed most services and business in Center City, including a noon shutdown of all downtown bus, trolley and subway stops.

Protesters — like others across the country, inspired by the death last week of George

Floyd, a black man who was pinned by a Minneapoli­s officer who put his knee on the handcuffed man’s neck — chanted “Let him go” after an arrest that was captured in videos posted online as relations between a crowd and police near Philadelph­ia’s convention center grew tense.

On a call with governors Monday before the confrontat­ion on the interstate, President Donald Trump singled out Philadelph­ia, where as of Monday morning destructio­n had been on par with that in some other major cities.

“Philadelph­ia is a mess. Philadelph­ia, what happened there is horrible. And that was on television. They’re breaking into stores and nobody showed up to even stop them,” Trump said.

Mayor Jim Kenney responded, saying Trump has not been helpful during the protests. Kenney also said he wasn’t prepared to speculate on whether the protests and their aftermath would change the city’s plan to ease restrictio­ns on businesses and other stay-at-home-orders by entering into the state’s yellow phase of coronaviru­s recovery Friday.

“I’m not saying no, but I’m not saying yes either,” Kenney said.

About 50 National Guard members arrived in the city early Monday, and about 50 more were expected soon, U.S. Attorney William McSwain said.

Protests also erupted across the state, including in Lancaster, Erie, Reading, Chambersbu­rg and the Lehigh Valley, where there was no violence at weekend demonstrat­ions in Allentown, Bethlehem and Easton.

Lancaster officials said Monday that they had evidence white nationalis­ts had instigated violence at a weekend rally there that had a few instances of bottles of cayenne pepper and other projectile­s thrown at police.

McSwain’s office is investigat­ing whether any crimes would fall under his federal jurisdicti­on, he and U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican, said at a news conference.

“We are looking into who are the real agitators,” McSwain said.

Police in Erie charged eight people after attacks on police and attempts to set fires at three downtown businesses Saturday.

The Erie Times-News reported that assaults or attempted assaults on police involved bricks, frozen water bottles, fireworks and a Molotov cocktail.

In Philadelph­ia, a fire late Sunday that appeared to have started at a Rent-A-Center in the Kensington neighborho­od caused parts of several stores and apartment buildings to collapse, Fire Commission­er Adam Thiel said.

Nearly two dozen police officers were injured over two nights, including one who was hit by a fleeing vehicle and is hospitaliz­ed with broken ribs and a broken arm, said John McNesby, president of a Philadelph­ia police union.

Police Commission­er Danielle Outlaw said police made 429 arrests from Saturday to early Monday, a number expected to grow. The city normally gets about 3,000 calls for police service, Kenney said, but got about 18,000 on Sunday.

“We have been sitting on a powder keg for some time and it has burst,” Outlaw said.

Associated Press reporters Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy in Harrisburg contribute­d to this report. The Morning Call contribute­d to this report.

 ?? JESSICA GRIFFIN/AP ?? Community members clean up broken glass Monday at a McDonald’s in West Philadelph­ia following protests against police brutality Sunday that turned violent.
JESSICA GRIFFIN/AP Community members clean up broken glass Monday at a McDonald’s in West Philadelph­ia following protests against police brutality Sunday that turned violent.
 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? Philadelph­ia police and National Guard take a knee Monday outside police headquarte­rs in Philadelph­ia.
MATT ROURKE/AP Philadelph­ia police and National Guard take a knee Monday outside police headquarte­rs in Philadelph­ia.
 ?? MARK MAKELA/GETTY ?? A shop owner exits his damaged store Monday in Philadelph­ia in the aftermath of widespread unrest following the killing of George Floyd.
MARK MAKELA/GETTY A shop owner exits his damaged store Monday in Philadelph­ia in the aftermath of widespread unrest following the killing of George Floyd.
 ?? MARK MAKELA/GETTY ?? Police officers shoot tear gas into a group of protesters Monday after a march through Center City in Philadelph­ia.
MARK MAKELA/GETTY Police officers shoot tear gas into a group of protesters Monday after a march through Center City in Philadelph­ia.

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