The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Court says Trump rally attendees don’t have to wear masks

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Sean Murphy

The Oklahoma Supreme Court on Friday rejected a request to require everyone attending President Donald Trump’s rally in Tulsa this weekend to wear a face mask and maintain social distancing inside the arena to guard against the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The court ruled that the two local residents who asked that the thousands expected at Saturday night’s rally be required to take the precaution­s couldn’t establish that they had a clear legal right to the relief they sought. Oklahoma has had a recent spike in coronaviru­s cases, but in a concurring opinion, two justices noted that the state’s plan to reopen its economy is “permissive, suggestive and discretion­ary.”

“Therefore, for lack of any mandatory language in the (plan), we are compelled to deny the relief requested.”

The request was made by John Hope Franklin for Reconcilia­tion, a nonprofit that promotes racial equality, and the Greenwood Centre, Ltd., which owns commercial real estate, on behalf of the two locals described as having compromise­d immune systems and being particular­ly vulnerable to COVID-19.

Meanwhile, Tulsa’s Republican mayor, G.T. Bynum, rescinded a day-old curfew he had imposed for the area around the BOK Center ahead of the rally. The curfew took effect Thursday night and was supposed to remain until Sunday morning, however Trump tweeted Friday that he had spoken to Bynum and that the mayor told him he would rescind it.

Bynum said he got rid of the curfew at the request of the U.S. Secret Service. In his executive order establishi­ng the curfew, Bynum said he was doing so at the request of law enforcemen­t who had intelligen­ce that that “individual­s from organized groups who have been involved in destructiv­e and violent behavior in other States are planning to travel to the City of Tulsa for purposes of causing unrest in and around the rally.”

Bynum didn’t elaborate as to which groups he meant and police Capt. Richard Meulenberg declined to identify any. Although President Trump has characteri­zed those who have clashed with law enforcemen­t after George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s as organized, radicallef­t thugs engaging in domestic terrorism, an Associated Press analysis found that the vast majority of people arrested during recent protests in Minneapoli­s and Washington, D.C., were locals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States