New Charlottesville Report Says Police WERE Told to Stand Down
This is huge!!
Back in August one was immediately attacked for giving an alternative view on these events - for saying that this this was NOT just about the KKK, white supremacists and that both sides might be to blame, as Donald Trump said at the time.
Trump was attacked for being fascist, white supremacist for saying so.
Now an internal report from the city of Charlottesville seems to vindicate Trump - yet again
A new report commissioned by the city of Charlottesville says that police WERE told to stand down during the violent rally on August 12. This contradicts numerous previous claims by public officials. The report says faulty police strategy & tactics contributed to the violence, and also that the Charlottesville police chief obstructed the investigation. We have LIVE BREAKING NEWS COVERAGE of this important new report
Charlottesville review: Faulty planning, passive police led to 'disastrous results' at Aug. 12 rally
CHARLOTTESVILLE
— A police officer radioed for help as angry protesters swarmed
around her: “They are pushing the crowd my way and I have nobody
here to help me.”
Tammy
Shiflett, who had just returned to active duty as an elementary
school resource officer after two months recovering from a shoulder
surgery, was the only person assigned to block traffic at the
intersection where a deadly car attack began in Charlottesville on
Aug. 12.
Instead
of sending reinforcements, a superior instructed her to abandon her
post and move the car that had been positioned in the intersection,
leaving a wooden sawhorse as the only barrier keeping vehicles out of
the area. Roughly an hour and a half later, a white nationalist drove
his car down that very street, striking a crowd of counterprotesters
and killing 32-year-old activist Heather Heyer.
The
decision by police officials to set up only minimal barriers in
preparation for the white nationalist rally and then, in one
particularly grave case, to withdraw from a “crucial”
intersection was among the dozens of mistakes, missteps and failures
cited in a damning report commissioned by the city and publicly
released Friday.
“Supervisors
devised a poorly-conceived plan that under-equipped and misaligned
hundreds of officers,” the report says. “Execution of that plan
elevated officer safety over public safety.”
The
review, led by Tim Heaphy, a former federal prosecutor who now works
for Hunton & Williams, also found:
• Despite
repeated public statements by state and local officials that officers
were not instructed to “stand down,” police had in fact been
instructed only to intervene in conflicts between white nationalists
and counterprotesters in the event of serious injury.
• A
Virginia State Police commander made an “off-plan” decision to
keep state officers behind barricades instead of sending them into
the streets to break up fights and make arrests.
• After
clashes began, Police Chief Al Thomas was heard by several people in
the command center saying to “let them fight, it will make it
easier to declare an unlawful assembly” and shut down the rally.
• Thomas
attempted to obstruct the city’s investigation, deleting relevant
text messages, attempting to hide his use of a personal email account
to conduct some official police business, and creating planning
checklists that were not actually used to plan for the rallies.
The
220-page document is based on hundreds of thousands of documents,
video and audio recordings, photos and interviews. It represents the
most comprehensive account yet of how public officials handled the
“Unite the Right” rally.
Overconfident local force
The
racist, far-right groups that organized the rally said they intended
to protest the city’s planned removal of a statue of Confederate
Gen. Robert E. Lee. But the event quickly devolved into chaos,
culminating in the car attack that made the rally a national news
story and led political leaders to promise a full exploration of what
went wrong and how future violence might be prevented.
At
a news conference Friday in Charlottesville, Heaphy said city police
were overly confident as they planned for the event and did not
consult with other localities that had dealt with similar protests
despite offers of assistance.
“There
was a sense (among local police) that ‘we’ve got this,’” he
said, saying officials cited to him previous experience handling a
large block party as an example of their expertise.
The
report is particularly critical of the traffic plan, noting that city
personnel had proposed using jersey barriers or dump trucks to block
intersections, but that the idea was inexplicably discarded. And
despite having more than 700 police officers on hand to respond to
the event, police decided in some cases to assign unsworn police
personnel, including a lab technician, to secure the event perimeter
and keep vehicles out.
“They
were told when it gets violent, go inside your car, lock your door,”
Heaphy said.
When
Shiflett, the school resource officer, left her post, the commander
in charge of traffic control was never notified and, at some point,
the wooden sawhorse was moved and vehicles began crossing into the
downtown mall on the street where the car attack would later take
place.
“Leaving
that intersection unguarded was a tactical error that should not have
been allowed to happen,” the report says.
The
report also says that while the city did not have authority under
state law to ban firearms, it did have the power to ban weapons such
as sticks and bats, but opted against pursuing such a prohibition
based on incorrect legal advice from the local commonwealth’s
attorney’s office.
In
addition to criticizing police planning, the report criticizes City
Council members for what it characterizes as last-minute
interference. Ten days before the rally, the council asked for the
event to be moved to a different park away from the downtown area,
over the objections of city staff members, including the police chief
and city manager.
The
decision by elected officials to wade into the operational planning
“was a dangerous overreach with lasting consequences.” A federal
judge ultimately overruled the attempt to cancel the permit, ordering
the city to allow the rally to proceed at the originally planned
location.
Instead
of intervening in violent street clashes occurring around
Emancipation Park, the site of the rally, police were instructed to
take largely passive positions and were slow to change into riot
gear. It’s a finding that starkly conflicts with prior assertions
by both state and local authorities that police were not told to
avoid getting involved in the clashes.
“VSP
directed its officers to remain behind barricades rather than risk
injury responding to conflicts between protesters and
counter-protesters,” the report says. “CPD commanders similarly
instructed their officers not to intervene in all but the most
serious physical confrontations.”
Police
commanders said they were hesitant to send officers into the crowds
to break up fights because doing so could result in a “deadly force
situation,” according to the report.
The
report includes statements from several Charlottesville police
officials who said they were frustrated by their inability to act.
“We
were sitting there with our thumbs up our asses,” said Lt. Jim
Mooney.
Instead
of taking a more aggressive posture to prevent violence, the report
says, commanders focused on declaring an unlawful assembly to clear
the park.
When
violence broke out, Thomas, the Charlottesville police chief, said,
“Let them fight, it will make it easier to declare an unlawful
assembly,” according to the recollections of Emily Lantz, an
executive assistant in the police department. The report says Thomas
“did not recall” making the remark, and an attorney for Thomas
denied he said it.
The
report says local officials were taken aback by Virginia State Police
adopting a “far more limited range of law enforcement activities”
than expected. State police Lt. Becky Crannis-Curl told a local
police captain Aug. 12 that she was making an “off-plan” decision
to not “send arrest teams into the street.”
The
idea that state police officers were not expected to “police
serious incidents of lawbreaking,” the report says, was never
communicated to city police during the planning process.
“Their
inaction in the face of violence left the City unprepared — and
unaware that it was unprepared — to address one of the predictable
risks of the event: brief but serious incidents of interpersonal
violence and mutual combat,” the report says.
In
discussions after the rally, Gov. Terry McAuliffe and Virginia State
Police Superintendent W. Steven Flaherty characterized the state
police role as “park security,” according to the report.
Overall,
the report concludes, the city of Charlottesville “was unable to
protect the right of free expression and facilitate the permit
holder’s offensive speech.”
“This
represents a failure of one of government’s core functions — the
protection of fundamental rights. Law enforcement also failed to
maintain order and protect citizens from harm, injury, and death,”
the report says. “Charlottesville preserved neither of those
principles on August 12, which has led to deep distrust of government
within this community.”
In
a statement responding to Heaphy’s report, Flaherty said the state
police “appreciate the time and effort” that went into it.
Calling thorough after-action reviews “invaluable” to preparing
for the future, Flaherty said he’s waiting to see final reports
from his own agency and one from a task force convened by the
governor.
Both
the extreme right and the extreme left, Flaherty said, went to the
rally “with the sole purpose of provoking violence from the
opposing side.”
“In
that kind of volatile and rapidly evolving environment, it is
difficult for any one police plan to account for every possible
circumstance and resulting scenario,” Flaherty said.
The
team of lawyers conducting the review also said Thomas and other
officials resisted their efforts to investigate what happened Aug.
12, but maintained that the review gathered enough information to
paint a comprehensive picture.
The
report accuses Thomas of making several attempts to obstruct the
process, including trying to control what information subordinates
gave to investigators, deleting text messages related to the review,
trying to hide his use of a personal email account to conduct some
official police business, and creating post hoc planning checklists
that were not actually used to plan for the rallies.
“Chief
Thomas’s attempts to influence our review illustrate a deeper issue
within CPD — a fear of retribution for criticism,” the report
says. “Many officers with whom we spoke expressed concern that
their truthful provision of critical information about the protest
events would result in retaliation from Chief Thomas.”
Thomas’
lawyer, Kevin E. Martingayle, denied the claims, saying it’s unfair
to focus on Thomas.
“This
report criticizes everybody,” Martingayle said, but he did not
offer a detailed rebuttal. He said Thomas received a copy of the
report only when it was made public Friday morning and that he would
offer a more detailed response in the future.
In
a statement, Charlottesville City Manager Maurice Jones said city
officials “do not agree with every aspect of the report’s
findings,” without elaboration.
“On
a number of fronts, as the report acknowledges, we succeeded in
protecting our City to the best of our abilities,” Jones said. “But
in other areas we, and our law enforcement partner in the Virginia
State Police, undoubtedly fell short of expectations, and for that we
are profoundly sorry.”
The
city manager’s statement gave no indication of displeasure with
Thomas. Jones said the police chief and his department are “dedicated
to protecting our city every day.”
Virginia
State Police also refused to provide some information to the Hunton &
Williams team, according to the report, an attitude consistent with
the agency’s “relative independence” before and during the
rally. The report says the state agency did not share its “formal
planning document” for the Aug. 12 rally with city police,
“conducted separate trainings and convened an exclusive briefing
for its on-scene personnel” on the morning of the event, and used a
separate radio channel to communicate as events unfolded.
State report forthcoming
McAuliffe
convened a state-level task force that has prepared its own report on
what happened in Charlottesville and what policies should change as a
result. That report was due to be submitted to the governor Friday,
but is not expected to be released to the public until next week.
The
helicopter crash that killed two state police pilots appeared to be
an “accident,” according to the report. The cause of the
helicopter crash was outside the scope of the review, but the report
points out that “almost all” of the state police left the
Charlottesville command center to go to the scene of the helicopter
crash. The report came in at 4:49 p.m., well after the rally appeared
to be over.
McAuliffe
and other state officials have said they wished the state had more
control over tactical decisions instead of serving in a supporting
role behind local police. His spokesman, Brian Coy, said the governor
will evaluate Heaphy’s report “in conjunction with” the report
he received from the state task force.
Though
the report is filled with stinging criticisms, Heaphy credited first
responders for a rapid reaction to the car attack.
“No
question these events could have been substantially worse,” Heaphy
said. “That is a success.”
In
a statement, Republican leaders in the General Assembly expressed
dismay over Heaphy’s report and said they will ask him to present
his findings to the legislature’s public safety committees next
year.
Del.
C. Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, said the findings were “certainly
inconsistent” with statements from public officials immediately
after the rally.
“It’s very troubling to learn that law enforcement was effectively told to stand down, even if those weren’t the words that were used,” Gilbert said.M
Int ehIn the meantime one of the most reasonable and balanced news outlet (that reports the news rather than churn out propaganda), the Right Side Broadcasting Network appears to have been singled out for harassment based on the subject matter.
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