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D.C. imposes curfew as protesters and police clash outside White House again | D.C. imposes curfew as protesters and police clash outside White House again |
(32 minutes later) | |
The third day of protests in the nation’s capital over the police killing of George Floyd began with bent knees, raised fists and pleas that this night, unlike the last, would remain peaceful. And for a moment, the more than 1,000 people who marched to Lafayette Square across from the White House listened. | The third day of protests in the nation’s capital over the police killing of George Floyd began with bent knees, raised fists and pleas that this night, unlike the last, would remain peaceful. And for a moment, the more than 1,000 people who marched to Lafayette Square across from the White House listened. |
The crowd — multigenerational and diverse — extended down H and 16th streets, holding up ripped-off pieces of cardboard that read, “I can’t breathe,” three of the final words Floyd spoke as a white Minneapolis police officer dug a knee into his neck. A man with a megaphone called out for a moment of silence, and for a full minute, nearly everyone went quiet. | |
The solemnity, though, didn’t last long. | The solemnity, though, didn’t last long. |
On the north side of the park, hundreds of the protesters gathered around the barricades that, not 24 hours before, had been dismantled. As one activist attempted to take them down again, an argument broke out. | On the north side of the park, hundreds of the protesters gathered around the barricades that, not 24 hours before, had been dismantled. As one activist attempted to take them down again, an argument broke out. |
“You are putting us all in danger!” one protester shouted. “Dismantling this fence proves nothing!” | “You are putting us all in danger!” one protester shouted. “Dismantling this fence proves nothing!” |
“That’s what I’m here to do!” the person who attacked the barricade yelled back. | “That’s what I’m here to do!” the person who attacked the barricade yelled back. |
Moments later, the barricade fell and protesters marched forward, shouting “Hands up, don’t shoot!” | Moments later, the barricade fell and protesters marched forward, shouting “Hands up, don’t shoot!” |
The new demonstration comes after a weekend of intense, often violent clashes between heavily armored law enforcement officers and outraged activists, some of whom looted stores and set buildings ablaze in Washington and its neighboring suburbs. | The new demonstration comes after a weekend of intense, often violent clashes between heavily armored law enforcement officers and outraged activists, some of whom looted stores and set buildings ablaze in Washington and its neighboring suburbs. |
On Sunday, the city and the region braced for another night of mayhem. D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser ordered a citywide curfew from 11 p.m. Sunday to 6 a.m. Monday. She also activated the D.C. National Guard. | |
In downtown Washington, Georgetown and elsewhere, people spent the afternoon hammering plywood boards outside retail shops and restaurants in the hopes their businesses would escape the attacks that others a day earlier did not. For some, those images, paired with the racial tension gripping dozens of cities across the country, conjured memories of the riots that ensued in 1968 after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. | |
The four days in 1968 that reshaped D.C. | The four days in 1968 that reshaped D.C. |
This explosion of anger coincides with a global pandemic that has taken more than 100,000 lives, including at least 4,300 in Virginia, Maryland and the District. Though many protesters have worn masks, the gatherings seldom allow people to stay six feet apart from each other. | |
On Sunday, as in the days before, any fear of catching or spreading the virus did little to deter the crowds of people who showed up to express their frustration with police brutality. | On Sunday, as in the days before, any fear of catching or spreading the virus did little to deter the crowds of people who showed up to express their frustration with police brutality. |
At the park, amid a number of anxious moments between the two sides — the hurling of water bottles, a sudden charge by police, a man and woman both pepper-sprayed near the barricades — there were genuine moments of unity, a stark contrast from the previous night. | At the park, amid a number of anxious moments between the two sides — the hurling of water bottles, a sudden charge by police, a man and woman both pepper-sprayed near the barricades — there were genuine moments of unity, a stark contrast from the previous night. |
A black officer, according to witnesses, briefly took a knee in solidarity with the protesters, who erupted in cheers. | A black officer, according to witnesses, briefly took a knee in solidarity with the protesters, who erupted in cheers. |
Not long after, another officer made an announcement on a megaphone: “Attention: We will continue to move back unless you break the police line.” | |
And again, cheering from the protesters, many of whom appeared to want the officers to join them rather than fight with them. | And again, cheering from the protesters, many of whom appeared to want the officers to join them rather than fight with them. |
As the sun began setting, the line of officers at Lafayette Square, most of them U.S. Park Police, stood in riot gear about 100 feet away from the crowd of at least 1,000 protesters, hundreds of them still pressed up close to the barricade. Other protesters perched in trees, on park benches and atop the small building at the north end of the park, holding up signs and trying to get a view as they shouted “Get off my neck” and “Who do you protect?” Others walked around the park, offering free water, hand sanitizer and snacks. | |
On Saturday, the hours before dusk were far more volatile, with police firing tear gas to try to control the crowds. When protesters failed to reach the White House, they scattered throughout downtown, with small groups of people remaining on the streets until early Sunday morning. Store windows were smashed, fires were set. | On Saturday, the hours before dusk were far more volatile, with police firing tear gas to try to control the crowds. When protesters failed to reach the White House, they scattered throughout downtown, with small groups of people remaining on the streets until early Sunday morning. Store windows were smashed, fires were set. |
D.C. police said 17 people, mostly local, were arrested. U.S. Secret Service and Park Police said they each arrested one person. | |
Tension between police and protesters flares in front of the White House before vandalism and sporadic fires | Tension between police and protesters flares in front of the White House before vandalism and sporadic fires |
“We’re sending a very clear message to people that they have a right to exercise their First Amendment rights but not to destroy our city,” Bowser said Sunday on NBC News’s “Meet the Press.” “We saw a level of destruction and mayhem among some that was maddening.” | “We’re sending a very clear message to people that they have a right to exercise their First Amendment rights but not to destroy our city,” Bowser said Sunday on NBC News’s “Meet the Press.” “We saw a level of destruction and mayhem among some that was maddening.” |
In Virginia, Gov. Ralph Northam (D) declared a state of emergency a day after protests in Richmond and Manassas left businesses wrecked and Confederate statues vandalized. | In Virginia, Gov. Ralph Northam (D) declared a state of emergency a day after protests in Richmond and Manassas left businesses wrecked and Confederate statues vandalized. |
A night of fire and fury across America as protests intensify | A night of fire and fury across America as protests intensify |
The protests have triggered an angry response from President Trump, who specifically singled out the District. Bowser, in turn, has blamed Trump for stoking divisions, saying he had “glorified violence.” | |
Bowser returned to that refrain during her television appearance Sunday. | Bowser returned to that refrain during her television appearance Sunday. |
“I think the president has a responsibility to calm the nation,” she said. “He can start by not sending divisive tweets that are meant to hearken to the segregationist past of our country.” | “I think the president has a responsibility to calm the nation,” she said. “He can start by not sending divisive tweets that are meant to hearken to the segregationist past of our country.” |
Bowser was referring to the president tweeting “When the looting starts, the shooting starts,” a phrase infamously used by a Miami police chief during racial unrest in the 1960s. | |
Her denunciation of the president was echoed by Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a prominent Republican who has clashed with Trump in recent weeks over the federal response to the coronavirus pandemic. Hogan said he worked to “lower the temperature” during the 2015 protests in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray in police custody, a tack he said Trump had failed to take. | Her denunciation of the president was echoed by Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a prominent Republican who has clashed with Trump in recent weeks over the federal response to the coronavirus pandemic. Hogan said he worked to “lower the temperature” during the 2015 protests in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray in police custody, a tack he said Trump had failed to take. |
“It’s just the opposite of the message that should have been coming out of the White House,” Hogan said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” | |
Bowser initially dismissed the value of imposing a curfew, saying, “We know people who were disruptive last night are not likely curfew followers.” LaToya Foster, a spokeswoman for the mayor, said Bowser changed her mind “out of an abundance of caution.” | |
D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham — who noted that 11 of his officers were injured, including one who fractured a leg after being hit by a brick — blamed the violence and vandalism on a small group and said his officers were prepared to handle any further unrest. | D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham — who noted that 11 of his officers were injured, including one who fractured a leg after being hit by a brick — blamed the violence and vandalism on a small group and said his officers were prepared to handle any further unrest. |
At least one of the business owners whose property was damaged said she bore no resentment toward the protesters. | At least one of the business owners whose property was damaged said she bore no resentment toward the protesters. |
Michelle Brown learned at midnight Saturday that her restaurant near the White House, Teaism, was on fire. Brown, still in pajamas, grabbed her hand sanitizer and car keys to go see the damage. Before she left, she wrote a tweet. | Michelle Brown learned at midnight Saturday that her restaurant near the White House, Teaism, was on fire. Brown, still in pajamas, grabbed her hand sanitizer and car keys to go see the damage. Before she left, she wrote a tweet. |
“Before anyone puts a single word in our mouths. Black lives matter,” she wrote. | “Before anyone puts a single word in our mouths. Black lives matter,” she wrote. |
Brown learned that protesters had destroyed her 20-year-old tea chest and that her beloved art work would soon be ash. Police prohibited her from entering her restaurant in the middle of the night, but hours later, she returned to find its charred remains. | |
“It was heartbreaking,” Brown said. “But this moment is not about us.” | “It was heartbreaking,” Brown said. “But this moment is not about us.” |
Brown wanted her customers to focus on the intense suffering that has swept the country instead of the damage done to her restaurant, because, she said, it would one day recover. | Brown wanted her customers to focus on the intense suffering that has swept the country instead of the damage done to her restaurant, because, she said, it would one day recover. |
“This seems pretty minor. … We have been through three months of being closed, we have seen 100,000 people die,” she said, referring to the pandemic’s impact. “I think the protests are great, and I think they are warranted.” | |
On Sunday, Jay Michaels, angry and exasperated, decide to join the one outside the White House. | On Sunday, Jay Michaels, angry and exasperated, decide to join the one outside the White House. |
The 23-year-old D.C. native walked there with a red bullhorn and a Washington Redskins mask. He wished he didn’t have to protest but felt that he had no other choice, he said. | |
“Turn the other cheek hasn’t worked,” said Michaels, a recent college graduate who wants to go to law school. “We’ve got to do something.” | |
Michaels is tired of people looking at him like he’s dangerous because he is black. | |
“This is not about D.C. police — this is about all police,” he said. “If we burn everything down, then something has got to give.” | |
By the time he arrived, the mood had grown more tense. | By the time he arrived, the mood had grown more tense. |
Each step the Secret Service officers took back from the police line drew taunts and the occasional water bottle. | |
“Do you feel like taking a knee now?” one man called out to a group of officers who briefly put down their riot shields. | “Do you feel like taking a knee now?” one man called out to a group of officers who briefly put down their riot shields. |
Then the officers again stepped forward, and more people ran. | Then the officers again stepped forward, and more people ran. |
“Don’t shoot us!” Vashti Matthis, 35, yelled. “We can’t even walk in our own community. We built this country. We shouldn’t have to do this in 2020.” | “Don’t shoot us!” Vashti Matthis, 35, yelled. “We can’t even walk in our own community. We built this country. We shouldn’t have to do this in 2020.” |
The police advanced again; more people ran, and Matthis retreated with them. | |
Even then, though, Andrew Blunt, who had also come out Saturday, could sense a difference on Sunday. It struck him that, after the protesters started throwing objects and jumping the barricade, others shouted at them to stop. | |
It sent a message, the 22-year-old thought: “What we did here yesterday, we’re not doing that anymore.” | It sent a message, the 22-year-old thought: “What we did here yesterday, we’re not doing that anymore.” |
But he acknowledged the message might not hold, because nightfall was yet to come. | But he acknowledged the message might not hold, because nightfall was yet to come. |
Petula Dvorak, Greogry S. Schneider, Ian Duncan, Emily Davies, Justin George and Peter Hermann contributed to this report. | Petula Dvorak, Greogry S. Schneider, Ian Duncan, Emily Davies, Justin George and Peter Hermann contributed to this report. |