WASHINGTON
(AP) — Federal authorities have charged four men in connection with a
failed effort last week to pull down the statue of President Andrew
Jackson near the White House.
In
a complaint unsealed Saturday, authorities allege that the men damaged
and attempted to tear down the Jackson statue, which is located in
Lafayette Square, last Monday. The square has been the site of protests
in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death while in police custody in
Minneapolis.
Those
charged are Lee Michael Cantrell, 47, of Virginia; Connor Matthew Judd,
20, of Washington, D.C.; Ryan Lane, 37, of Maryland; and Graham Lloyd,
37, of Maine.
Judd
was arrested on Friday and appeared in Superior Court of the District
of Columbia on Saturday, authorities said. The other three have not been
apprehended. The FBI and the U.S. Park Police have been investigating
the incident.
A
statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia
says the complaint alleges that Cantrell was captured on video
attempting to pry the statue off its base with a wooden board and trying
to pull the statue down with the aid of a yellow strap. Judd is seen on
video trying to pull down the statue while Lane is seen on video
affixing a rope to one part of the statue and then pulling on another
rope tied to the statue, the complaint alleges.
The
video also shows Lloyd as he breaks off and destroys the wheels of
cannons located at the base of the statue, pulling on ropes in an effort
to topple the statue, and handing a hammer to an unidentified
individual involved in the incident, the complaint alleges.
“The
United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia will not
stand idly by and allow our national monuments to be vandalized and
destroyed,” Acting U.S. Attorney Michael R. Sherwin said in a statement.
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