The protesters outside the White House Monday
who were cleared by police prior to President Trump’s brief visit to
St. John’s Episcopal Church were “professional agitators” and the media
fell for their “calculated” tactics, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said on
late Monday. “They
knew the street needed to be cleared before 7 pm curfew,” Rubio
tweeted. “But they deliberately stayed to trigger police action &
get the story they wanted, that “police attacked peaceful protesters.” The
criticism that Trump faced after being photographed outside the church
was swift. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer issued a joint statement to call out the “photo-op.” “Across
our country, Americans are protesting for an end to the pattern of
racial injustice and brutality we saw most recently in the murder of
George Floyd,” the statement read. “Yet, at a time when our country
cries out for unification, this President is ripping it apart.
Tear-gassing peaceful protestors without provocation just so that the
President could pose for photos outside a church dishonors every value
that faith teaches us.” The Associated Press reported that at
about 6:30 p.m., law enforcement officers were “aggressively forcing the
protesters back “firing tear gas and deploying flash bangs into the
crowd to disperse them from the park for seemingly no reason. It was a
jarring scene as police in the nation’s capital forcefully cleared young
men and women gathered legally in a public park on a sunny evening, all
of it on live television.” Washington D.C.'s Mayor Muriel Bowser
tweeted that federal police "used munitions on "peaceful
protesters" a full 25 minutes before the curfew. She called the decision
shameful. The church caught fire the previous night during unrest over Floyd’s death
in police custody. Trump has spoken out about Floyd’s death and called
the video “horrible.” Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin
was charged with third-degree murder and the three other officers with
Chauvin were fired but not yet charged. Attorneys for Floyd's
family released the results of an independent autopsy report Monday
afternoon showing that Floyd's death was caused by asphyxia due to neck
and back compression that led to a lack of blood flow to the brain. Another autopsy, conducted by
the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's office, stated that Floyd died
from "cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual
restraint, and neck compression" while being restrained, Fox 9 reported. Its updated results went public Monday evening. Hillary
Clinton and Joe Biden, the likely Democrat nominee to face Trump in
2020, also criticized the president for removing the protesters. "Tonight
the President of the United States used the American military to shoot
peaceful protestors with rubber bullets & tear gas them. For a photo
op," Clinton said. "This is a horrifying use of presidential power
against our own citizens, & has no place anywhere, let alone in
America. Vote." NPR reported that U.S. Park Police and National
Guard troops were tasked with removing the protesters. The report said
Trump stopped in front of the church, held up a Bible and said, “We have
the greatest country in the world. Keep it nice and safe.” Trump
was also criticized by church leaders who said they were not aware of
the visit. Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Michael Curry told NPR
that Trump “used a church building and the Holy Bible for partisan
political purposes. This was done in a time of deep hurt and pain in our
country, and his action did nothing to help us or to heal us.” Fox News' David Aaro, Bradford Betz, Vandana Rambaran and the Associated Press contributed to this report
Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein played a central role in the Russia hoax. He was vindictive, conniving and unscrupulous as he sought to destroy the very president he pretended to support and serve. On
Wednesday, Rosenstein will finally be questioned about his actions by
the Senate Judiciary Committee as its first witness into an
investigation of the origins and evolution of the Russia probe that was
opened by the FBI
in the summer of 2016. Ten months later —thanks to Rosenstein— it
morphed into a special counsel case that dragged on for an agonizing 22
months. It was Rosenstein who presided over the special counsel investigation of President Trump, all the while conspiring behind the scenes to overthrow him. The duplicity was classic Rosenstein. He
well knew that his appointment of Robert Mueller in May of 2017 was an
illegitimate abuse of power and contrary to federal regulations
governing the naming of a special counsel, as explained in my last
column. At the time, there was no evidence that Trump or his campaign
had colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 presidential election. It was
all there in the FBI files, hidden from the public but readily
available to Rosenstein. Months earlier in January of 2017, the
FBI had debunked the anti-Trump “dossier” as little more than scurrilous
lies, exaggerations and fiction. There was no other credible evidence
of a collusion conspiracy. James Comey’s FBI knew it, and so did
Rosenstein. Yet, he was undeterred. In a fit of anger, he hired Mueller
for an investigation in search of a crime, which is anathema to the rule
of law. The
White House was understandably shocked. And so were other top officials
at the Department of Justice (DOJ). As I recounted in my book, "Witch Hunt: The Story Of The Greatest Mass Delusion In American Political History" (page 155), Rosenstein was allegedly confronted in his office over what he had done: “Rosenstein was literally cowering … hiding behind and somewhat below his desk. ‘Am I gunna get fired?’ blubbered Rosenstein.” It
is a scathing indictment of Rosenstein’s lack of character that he only
seemed to care about himself. Never mind that he had launched — on his
own authority — a national nightmare that would hobble the presidency
for two more years, divide Americans over an unfounded scandal and
inflict profound damage to our system of justice. Why did
Rosenstein appoint Mueller? It was an act of retaliation. The deputy
attorney general was furious that Democrats in Congress blamed him for
the firing of Comey as FBI director. Rosenstein, who authored the
firing memo, was suddenly “regretful and emotional,” according to people
who interacted with him at the time. He became unglued and blamed Trump
for all the criticism. Mueller was Rosenstein’s revenge. But
hiring the special counsel was merely the first part of Rosenstein’s
nefarious scheme. Part two constituted one of the most diabolical plots
in American political history. The Attempted Coup The
moment Comey was fired by the president, Rosenstein began meeting
secretly with Comey’s temporary replacement, acting FBI director Andrew
McCabe (who was later fired for lying). McCabe decided to initiate a new
FBI investigation of Trump simultaneous with Rosenstein’s appointment
of Mueller as special counsel. In other words, they double-teamed Trump
even though neither one had a scintilla of evidence to justify their
actions. At the same time, Rosenstein and McCabe convened
repeatedly behind closed doors to discuss a plan to evict the duly
elected president of the United States from office and undo the 2016
election results. According to McCabe, it was Rosenstein’s idea to
depose Trump by secretly recording the president for the purpose of
gathering incriminating evidence of something —anything. Armed with such
supposed evidence, he would recruit cabinet members to remove Trump
under the 25th Amendment Here is what McCabe later told CBS’s "60 Minutes": “The
deputy attorney general offered to wear a wire into the White House. He
said, ‘I never get searched when I go into the White House, I could
easily wear a recording device, they wouldn’t know it was there.’ Now,
he wasn’t joking, he was absolutely serious, and in fact, he brought it
up in the next meeting we had.” McCabe didn’t stop there in
unraveling the sordid story. He explained how Rosenstein intended to use
whatever evidence he might gather furtively as a basis for convincing
cabinet officials to remove Trump from office. “Discussion of the
25th Amendment was simply, Rod raised the issue and discussed it with
me in the context of thinking about how many other cabinet officials
might support such an effort.” McCabe claimed that Rosenstein was
already “counting votes” among cabinet members he had contacted
surreptitiously. Government memos confirm this account, and those
documents were handed over to Mueller. Did he do anything about it? Of
course not. The special counsel report made no mention of it.
The
Senate Judiciary Committee must confront Rosenstein about his warrant
application. The Justice Department has stated that it was illegally
obtained without probable cause.
The plot to carry
out the equivalent of a coup would have been a lawless misuse of
power. The 25th Amendment provides for the removal of a president if he
is incapacitated or “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his
office.” Disliking a president or his decision-making is not a basis for
evicting him from office under the amendment. When the story of
Rosenstein’s scheme was later revealed in news reports, he dismissed the
story as “inaccurate and factually incorrect.” But in his meticulously
worded statement to the media, he did not deny seeking an illegitimate
basis for removing Trump. It was a canny misdirection and quite typical
of Rosenstein’s propensity for deflection. In a bid to hang on to
his job, Rosenstein arranged a meeting with Trump. Here is what the
president told me about their conversation: President Trump: He
(Rosenstein) said it didn’t happen. He said he never said it. What he
told other people is that he was joking. But to me, he claimed he never
said it. Jarrett: Did you believe him? President: I didn’t really know what to believe. So
which was it? A joke or a fiction? Logically, it cannot be both. During
which account was Rosenstein telling the truth? In one of them, he must
have been lying. On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee
must grill Rosenstein in detail about his attempted coup to remove the
president and subvert democracy. Spying On Carter Page The
four successive surveillance warrants to spy on former Trump campaign
associate Carter Page were serial abuses of constitutional rights and
the legal process. Factual asserts submitted to the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court (FISC) were not just wrong, they were never
validated as true even though the FBI and DOJ officials who signed the
documents swore that the information was, indeed, verified. The
applications were filled with errors, omissions, deceptions and lies. Rosenstein
signed off on the final renewal in June of 2017 shortly after he
wrongfully appointed the special counsel and schemed to depose Trump
from office. The deputy attorney general was desperate to come up with
some kind of evidence that would justify what he had already done. The
FBI and Rosenstein relied almost entirely on the “dossier” composed by
ex-British spy Christopher Steele. It was phony on its face. It was
commissioned by the Hillary Clinton campaign and Democrats. Newly
declassified documents show that it was nothing more than malicious
Russian disinformation. By January of 2017, the FBI knew this. Surely,
Rosenstein knew it too. All of this was concealed from the judges. Yet,
he affixed his signature on the warrant to spy on Page, thereby
representing to the court that the information was both true and
verified when he must have known that it was not. Lying to a court
constitutes fraud and other potential crimes. Rosenstein was well aware
of this, as any lawyer would be. Consider what he said at a public forum several months after he signed the warrant application: “In
order to get a FISA warrant, you need an affidavit signed by a career
law enforcement officer who swears the information is true… And if it is
wrong, that person is going to face consequences. You can face
discipline and sometimes prosecution.” Rosenstein’s words
frame a prophetic indictment of his own wrongful and, arguably, illegal
actions. He swore the information was true and verified. The opposite
was true. Rosenstein was acutely aware that the FBI had spent months
trying in vain to verify the evidence. A month after his public
remarks, Rosenstein was questioned by the House Judiciary Committee. He
refused to answer direct questions but suggested that he might not have
even read the warrant application that he signed. Grudgingly, he
admitted that he did not always read what he was signing. It is
ironic that the man who so sternly lectured an audience about how
imperative it was for every prosecutor to ensure that a spy warrant
contained truthful information is the same man who may never have
bothered to read the one he signed against Carter Page. Or perhaps he
read it but didn’t care about the many lies and misrepresentations
contained therein. On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee
must confront Rosenstein about his warrant application. The Justice
Department has stated that it was illegally obtained without probable
cause. It has Rosenstein’s dirty fingerprints all over it. Attorney
General William Barr has denounced government officials for their
“misconduct,” “malfeasance and misfeasance” and “clear abuse of the FISA
process.” Rosenstein was an integral part of it. Barr has said
that officials “misled the FISA court, omitted critical exculpatory
facts from their filings and suppressed or ignored information negating
the reliability of their principal source.” Rosenstein
is far more guilty than others. As the highest-ranking official
involved, he had a special and affirmative duty to ensure that the law
was being scrupulously followed. His chronic failures and malevolent
actions, as described above, constitute an egregious breach of trust. Come
Wednesday, senators in their questioning of Rosenstein should give no
quarter in demanding honest answers from a man who has shown no regard
for either honesty or justice.
Podcast host Buck Sexton on Sunday called “completely unfair” the NBC report that claimed President Trump was fanning flames amid the coronavirus pandemic and civil unrest in the wake of the death of George Floyd.
“I
had the president on my radio show last week. We spoke specifically
about the George Floyd case. He said it was horrible, the Justice
Department was looking into it, that he expected authorities to bring
swift justice,” host of the "Buck Sexton Show" told Howard Kurtz on “Media Buzz.” Sexton said that President Trump’s comments during his show were “exactly what I would want a commander in chief to say.” “There isn’t a whole lot of debate or discussion about how horrible what happened in Minnesota was.” Dozens of cities across the United States were picking up the pieces on Sunday after a grim night of violent riots that
left at least three dead, dozens injured, hundreds arrested and
buildings and businesses in charred ruins as protests over the death of a
black Minneapolis man in police custody continued for a fifth day. Mayors of major cities imposed curfews, governors in nearly a dozen states deployed the National Guard in a desperate bid to stem the mayhem, chaos and wreckage. Though the incident that touched off the rioting occurred Monday in Minnesota and led to a cop being swiftly charged with murder, the damage seemed to culminate Saturday night and spanned from coast to coast. In New York City,
the NYPD said at least 345 people were arrested and at least 47 police
vehicles damaged or destroyed during the incidents on Saturday. A total
of 33 police officers were also injured. In Beverly Hills, Calif., shops
along the storied Rodeo Drive were looted as a crowd estimated at more than 2,000 people chanted "Eat the rich!'
Sexton pushed back on the media and others whom he claimed were “fanning the flames.” “If
you’re looking for people who are fanning the flames, I saw protesters
here on the street. I walked amongst them several times just because
they’re all over the city. They’re screaming profanity at police
officers, They’re calling them racist murderers. It’s appalling and
then, on top of that, you add the destruction of property, the NYPD cars
lit on fire, and the media always soft peddling this: ‘oh this is an
expression of rage,’” Sexton said. Sexton went on to say, “No, this is looting, this is arson, this is violence and it needs to be stopped.” Fox News' Caitlin McFall and Dom Calicchio contributed to this report.
Demonstrators standing off with police in downtown Raleigh, N.C.,
on Saturday, during a protest over the death of George Floyd, who died
in police custody on Memorial Day in Minneapolis. (Ethan Hyman/The News
& Observer via AP)
The coronavirus lockdown is seemingly down and out, as many Democrats
in charge of big cities -- including several who once insisted on
strict quarantine measures -- line up to champion the nationwide mass
demonstrations over the in-custody death of George Floyd, sans social distancing. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo lashed out
at protesters calling to reopen the state earlier this month, saying at
a news conference, "you have no right to jeopardize my health ... and
my children's health and your children's health." Cuomo's directives
have been enforced throughout the state: A New York City tanning salon
owner told Fox News he was fined $1,000 for reopening briefly last week, calling the situation "insane" and saying he already was "broke." On Friday, though, Cuomo said
he "stands" with those defying stay-at-home orders: "Nobody is
sanctioning the arson, and the thuggery and the burglaries, but the
protesters and the anger and the fear and the frustration? Yes. Yes, and
the demand is for justice." In April, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio told the
Jewish community that "the time for warnings has passed" after he said a
funeral gathering had violated social distancing guidelines. On
Sunday, the mayor asserted, "We have always honored non-violent protests." Minneapolis
Mayor Jacob Frey, meanwhile, had warned that in-person worship services
would be a "public-health disaster," disregarding constituents'
concerns that he was violating their First Amendment rights. Now, his
administration has been distributing masks to rioters, even though public gatherings of 10 or more are still ostensibly banned. Frey also allowed a police station to burn, saying it was necessary to protect police and rioters. "The
city encourages everyone to exercise caution to stay safe while
participating in demonstrations, including wearing masks and physical
distancing as much as possible to prevent the spread of COVID-19," a
news release read. "The city has made hundreds of masks available to protesters this week." The mayor of Washington D.C., Muriel Bowser, vowed $5,000
fines or 90 days in jail for anyone violating stay-at-home orders. This
weekend, though, Bowser defended the protests: "We are grieving
hundreds of years of institutional racism. ... People are tired, sad,
angry and desperate for change." An angry mob of rioters in
the city turned its rage on a Fox News crew early Saturday, chasing and
pummeling the journalists outside the White House in a harrowing scene captured on video. And, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti threatened in
March to cut power and water for businesses that reopened, saying he
wanted to punish "irresponsible and selfish" behavior. In recent days,
he has encouraged mass gatherings, even as he condemned violence. "I
will always protect Angelenos' right to make their voices heard — and we
can lead the movement against racism without fear of violence or
vandalism," he said. These officials were just some of the most
prominent politicans to have adopted strikingly different rhetoric on
mass gatherings over Floyd's death, including several protests that have
triggered property damage, injuries, beatings, and several deaths.
The mayor of Atlanta, Keisha Lance Bottoms, has been one of the few
politicians to keep up her coronavirus admonitions. "If you were out
protesting last night, you probably need to go get a COVID test this
week," she told CNN on Sunday. "There is still a pandemic in America
that’s killing black and brown people at higher numbers." Although some Democrats, including Garcetti, have since welcomed
the support of the National Guard to quell the demonstrations, they
explicitly noted they were doing so to combat "destruction" and
"vandalism" -- not widespread defiance of stay-at-home orders. Four officers have been fired in the Floyd case, and one has been arrested and charged. A video
showed the arrested officer kneeling on Floyd for several minutes as he
screamed that he could not breathe, although an initial medical
examiner's report found "no physical findings that support a diagnosis
of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation" -- and cited Floyd's "underlying
health conditions including coronary artery disease and hypertensive
heart disease," as well as the "potential intoxicants" in his system. "Democratic
elected officials have now all-but destroyed any remaining political
deference in terms of policies needed to enforce social distancing,
limit crowd size and the like," journalist Michael Tracey said. He also suggested the protests obfuscated key data, pointing to statistics from The Washington Post showing
that a total of 41 unarmed people were shot and killed by U.S. police
in 2019 -- 19 of them white, nine black and nine Hispanic. Others noted
that the "Grim Reaper" who patrolled Florida's beaches to shame swimmers and sunbathers amid the pandemic was nowhere to be seen at the protests. "WE
LITERALLY STAYED IN OUR HOUSES FOR A MONTH BECAUSE OF FEAR OF A VIRUS
WITH A 99.74% SURVIVAL RATE AND NOW ARE SUPPOSED TO IGNORE NATIONAL
COP-KILLING RIOTS?!!" Kentucky State political science professor Wilfred
Reilly tweeted. "SERIOUS question, as re these riots - where are all
these Governors that gave daily three hour press conferences about
whether you could walk down the beach or visit your dying relatives? Is
the COVID-19 crisis over?" There have been other indicators that
officials' concerns about the coronavirus were overblown. Warnings from
Democrats that the recent Wisconsin election would lead to a spike in
coronavirus cases, for example, proved unfounded.
("I don’t think that the in-person election led to a major effect, to
my surprise. I expected it,” infectious diseases expert Oguzhan Alagoz said.) Reilly
added: "The way you create a narrative is to isolate and publicize
every incident of the phenomenon you're focused on. Black:
white/inter-racial violent crime is 5% of crime (600K cases/12M crimes),
and 80% of THAT is Black on white. Wouldn't think that from the papers,
wouldja?" Scattered efforts by the Democrats to condemn some of
the protesters have relied on inaccurate information and unfounded
assertions that contradict available data and video evidence. For
instance, former Obama National Security Advisor Susan Rice appeared to blame the Russians for the protests on Sunday, saying the violence was right out of their "playbook" and that they're "probably" involved. Rice also falsely claimed that Trump had called white supremacists "very fine people," which has been repeatedly debunked.
Like Rice, Trump specifically made a distinction between peaceful
political protesters and white supremacists, whom Trump said he
condemned "totally." ("Very fine people" were protesting the censorship
and removal of a Civil War statue, Trump said.) And, Frey said
Saturday that officials thought "white supremacists" and "out-of-state
instigators" could be behind the protests in the wake of Floyd's death,
and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz also claimed most of the protesters arrested
were from outside Minneapolis and sought to take advantage of the
chaos. "We are now confronting white supremacists, members of
organized crime, out of state instigators, and possibly even foreign
actors to destroy and destabilize our city and our region," Frey had
tweeted Saturday. However, a report by
KARE 11 showed "about 86 percent" of the 36 arrests listed their
address in Minnesota, and that they live in Minneapolis or the metro
area, according to data the outlet analyzed from the Hennepin County
Jail's roster. Five out-of-state cases came from Arkansas, Florida,
Illinois, Michigan and Missouri. St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter later admitted
he was wrong when he falsely claimed that "every person" arrested in
Minneapolis protests was from out of state. Frey has not issued a
similar retraction, and multiple calls by Fox News to his office seeking
comment were met with a busy signal. An emailed message was not
immediately returned. On Sunday, White House National Security
Adviser Robert O'Brien disputed reports that far-right and white
supremacist groups were involved in stoking the violence. "I
haven't seen reports of far-right groups," O'Brien said in an interview
Sunday morning on CNN's "State of the Union." "This is being driven by
Antifa." Later Sunday, Trump announced he would designate Antifa a terrorist organization. "The United States of America will be designating ANTIFA as a Terrorist Organization," Trump tweeted Sunday afternoon. "It’s ANTIFA and the Radical Left. Don’t lay the blame on others!" Trump had tweeted Saturday. Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo was less decisive in stating who was behind the
looting, arson, and violence that has taken place. While he called
rioters "Antifa-like" during an appearance on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures,"
he said, "I think it still remains to be seen exactly how" the
situation devolved from peaceful protests to something entirely
different. Fox News' Caitlin McFall, Andrew O'Reilly, Tyler Olson and Fox Business' Maria Bartiromo contributed to this report.
A
senior official in the direct chain of command for defending Washington
D.C. told Fox News that more than 50 Secret Service officers have been
injured Sunday night so far, and that some rioters are throwing bottles
and Molotov cocktails. As observed
in New York City and elsewhere, groups in D.C. are planting cars filled
with incendiary materials for future use, Fox News is told. U.S.
Marshals and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents have been
deployed to the streets of D.C. in an extraordinary move to beef up
security alongside local police and Homeland Security agents, including
the Secret Service, the Justice Department confirmed late Sunday. Fox
News has learned U.S. Attorney for D.C. Mike Sherwin is heavily involved
in the operation. Lights that normally illuminate the exterior of the White House were disabled early Monday morning, reportedly so that the Secret Service could use night-vision equipment to monitor protesters. Additionally,
the entire Washington, D.C. National Guard is being called in to help
with the response to protests outside the White House and elsewhere in
the nation’s capital, according to two Defense Department officials.
Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said Sunday that she had requested 500 DC
Guardsman to assist local law enforcement. Later on Sunday, as the
protests escalated, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy ordered the rest of the
Guardsman — roughly 1,200 soldiers — to report. As authorities
clashed with demonstrators for the third straight night, the parish
house connected to the historic St. John’s Episcopal Church across the
street from the White House was set on fire late Sunday.
The parish house contains offices and parlors for gatherings. The
basement, which was also torched, is used for childcare during church
services, and had recently undergone renovations.
Police stand near a overturned vehicle and a fire as demonstrators
protest the death of George Floyd, Sunday, May 31, 2020, near the White
House in Washington. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis
police officers. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The church says every president beginning with James
Madison, “until the present,” has attended a service at the church,
giving it the nickname, “the church of presidents.” The first services
at the church were held in 1816, according to its website. Before
the blaze, church officials had said they were thankful that the
previous day of protests hadn't significantly damaged the structure. "We
are fortunate that the damage to the buildings is limited," Rev. Rob
Fisher, the rector of the church, said in a statement earlier Sunday,
several hours before the fire was set. The American Federation of
Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) building was
also set ablaze near the White House. The AFL-CIO is the nation's
largest pro-union group. An hour before the 11 p.m. ET curfew in
D.C., police fired a major barrage of tear gas stun grenades into the
crowd of more than 1,000 people, largely clearing Lafayette Park across
the street from the White House and scattering protesters into the
street.
Demonstrators protest the death of George Floyd, Sunday, May 31,
2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Police stage in Lafayette Park as demonstrators gather to protest
the death of George Floyd, Sunday, May 31, 2020, near the White House in
Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Protesters piled up road signs and plastic barriers
and lit a raging fire in the middle of H Street. Some pulled an American
flag from a nearby building and threw it into the blaze. Others added
branches pulled from trees. A cinder block structure, on the north side
of the park, that had bathrooms and a maintenance office, was engulfed
in flames. Several miles north, a separate protest broke out in
Northwest D.C., near the Maryland border. The Metropolitan Police
Department says there were break-ins at a Target and a shopping center
that houses Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue Men’s Store, T.J. Maxx, a
movie theater and specialty stores. Police say several individuals have
been detained.
Police form a line on H Street as demonstrators gather to protest
the death of George Floyd, Sunday, May 31, 2020, near the White House in
Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Separately on Sunday, Twitter suspended the account of Antifa, the left-wing group that Trump branded a terrorist organization earlier in the day. The suspension came after Antifa urged members to go into "white hoods" and "take what's ours." Twitter and President Trump have sparred in recent days over censorship. The developments came as it emerged that the Secret Service took President Trump to the White House's underground bunker on Friday night, when protests outside the complex intensified. A senior administration official confirmed the information to Fox News after The New York Times first reported the story. “Wasn’t long. But he went," the official said Sunday. The White House declined to comment. “The White House does not comment on security protocols and decisions,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said. Trump's
precise position Sunday night was not immediately clear. Trump traveled
to Florida on Saturday to view the first manned space launch from the
U.S. in nearly a decade. He returned to a White House under virtual
siege, with protesters — some violent — gathered just a few hundred
yards away through much of the night.
Demonstrators start a fire as they protest the death of George
Floyd, Sunday, May 31, 2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP
Photo/Alex Brandon)
Demonstrators protest the death of George Floyd, Sunday, May 31,
2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The D.C. demonstration Sunday was one of several
around the country responding to the death of Floyd, a black man who
died in police custody. Four officers have been fired in the Floyd case, and one has been arrested and charged. A video showed
the arrested officer kneeling on Floyd for several minutes as he
screamed that he could not breathe, although an initial medical
examiner's report found "no physical findings that support a diagnosis
of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation" -- and cited Floyd's "underlying
health conditions including coronary artery disease and hypertensive
heart disease," as well as the "potential intoxicants" in his system. The scale of the coast-to-coast protests rivaled the historic demonstrations of the civil rights and Vietnam War eras. In Birmingham, Alabama, footage appeared to show demonstrators violently attacking journalists on Sunday. Iowa Law School professor Andy Grewal tweeted:
"Friend in Chicago called 911. Phone rang 10 times. He explained that
the building across the street was being broken into and looted and the
dispatcher then hung up on him." In Minnesota, a semitrailer sped toward a crowd of protesters, in a scene caught on harrowing video.
Police announced the unidentified driver was arrested and taken to
Hennepin Healthcare with non-life threatening injuries after the
protesters dragged him from his truck and apparently attacked him.
Remarkably, DPS officials said it appeared none of the protesters was
seriously injured. Protesters in Philadelphia hurled rocks and
Molotov cocktails at police, officials said, while masked crowds broke
into upscale stores in a San Francisco suburb, fleeing with bags of
merchandise. In Austin, Texas, video showed protesters appearing to cheer as a homeless man's belongings were set on fire. Looting was rampant in California, even in the well-to-do Bay Area suburb of Walnut Creek. In one bizarre episode caught on tape, looters there appeared to loot other looters. In Brooklyn, two attorneys, including a New York University School of Law graduate, were charged
with throwing a Molotov cocktail at an NYPD cruiser. Colinford Mattis,
32, worked at the Times Square law firm Pryor Cashman, but his profile
was removed from the firm's website after the news broke. In
Denver, police fired tear gas and projectiles at demonstrators defying
a curfew following a day of peaceful marching and chants of “Don’t
shoot” alongside boarded-up businesses that had been vandalized the
night before. Dozens of demonstrators, some throwing fireworks,
taunted police and pushed dumpsters onto Colfax Avenue, a major artery,
in the sporadic confrontations that occurred east of downtown. 83 had
been arrested in the area on Saturday night. Denver Mayor Michael Hancock called the behavior of unruly protesters “reckless, inexcusable and unacceptable.” Curfews
were imposed in major cities around the U.S., including Atlanta,
Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. About 5,000
National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in 15 states and
Washington, D.C. At least 4,100 people have been arrested over
days of protests, according to a tally compiled by The Associated Press.
Arrests ranged from looting and blocking highways to breaking curfew. The
scene on Sunday was similar to the episode outside the White House two
days earlier. Around the time Trump headed to the safety Friday night, multiple agents
were being "assaulted with bricks, rocks, bottles, fireworks and other
items" -- injuring a number of uniformed division officers and special
agents, according to the Secret Service. The extent of the
injuries was unclear. No one reportedly made it over the White
House fence, but the agency determined that the situation warranted
immediate action. Trump has said he had “watched every move” from
inside the executive mansion during Friday's protest and “couldn't have
felt more safe” as the Secret Service let the protesters carry on, “but
whenever someone ... got too frisky or out of line, they would quickly
come down on then, hard — didn't know what hit them.” On Saturday morning, Trump praised the Secret Service for its protection of the White House the
previous night, calling them “very cool & very professional” -- and
warned that any protesters who breached the fence would have met by
"vicious dogs" and "ominous weapons."
Demonstrators gather to protest the death of George Floyd, Sunday,
May 31, 2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex
Brandon)
"The President doesn’t make the call to move to the
bunker," Dan Bongino, a former lead Secret Service agent in the
presidential protective detail and a Fox News contributor, wrote on Sunday. "The trained professionals of the Secret Service do." While
unusual, it isn't unprecedented for protectees to be taken to the
underground bunker when there are aerial intrusions or other threats to
the White House. Top White House officials, including then-Vice
President Dick Cheney, were whisked to the bunker after the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The mob outside the White House had
also turned its rage on a Fox News crew early Saturday, chasing and
pummeling the journalists in a harrowing scene captured on video.
Police in riot gear stand in front of the White House as
demonstrators gather to protest the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May
30, 2020. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Veteran reporter Leland Vittert was
covering protests in Lafayette Park just before1 a.m. with
three crewmembers when as many as a dozen masked protesters surrounded
them, in footage caught by the Daily Caller. After a protester lunged at Vittert while he was reporting on-air, the team made a beeline out of the park, with the hostile and growing crowd in pursuit. Vittert
and the crew were punched and hit with projectiles as they fled, and a
Fox News camera was broken when a member of the mob tried to grab it. Police
fired pepper spray at demonstrators near the White House and the D.C.
National Guard was called in this weekend, as the scene outside the
White House seemed fraught again on Sunday night. The Secret
Service tweeted late Sunday: "In an effort to ensure public safety,
pedestrians and motorists are encouraged to avoid streets and parks near
the White House complex." Hundreds of people converged on the
White House and marched along the National Mall, chanting “Black Lives
Matter,” “I can't breathe” and “No justice, no peace.” Protesters
threw water bottles, traffic cones, scooters, even tear gas cans at
police lines. They set fire to a car and a trash bin and smashed
windows, including at Bay Atlantic University. “What are you doing?
That's a school,” one man yelled. An American flag hanging at the Export-Import Bank was taken down, burned and replaced with a Black Lives Matter banner.
Law enforcement officers from Calvert County Maryland Sheriff's
Office standing on the Ellipse, area just south of the White House in
Washington, as they watch demonstrators protest the death of George
Floyd, Sunday, May 31, 2020. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Trump appeared to cheer on the tougher tactics being
used by law enforcement to disperse protesters Saturday night. He
commended National Guard troops deployed in Minneapolis, declaring “No
games!” and he also said police in New York City “must be allowed to do
their job!” “Let New York’s Finest be New York’s Finest,” Trump
said on Twitter after returning to the White House from Florida, where
he watched the launch of a SpaceX rocket. He did not talk to reporters
upon his return and it was not clear if he could hear the protest over
the sound of his helicopter. But for at least part of the flight,
televisions on Air Force One were turned to Fox News and its coverage of
the protests. Earlier in the day, he had belittled the protesters and pledged to “stop mob violence.” “I
stand before you as a friend and ally to every American seeking justice
and peace, and I stand before you in firm opposition to anyone
exploiting this tragedy to loot, rob, attack and menace,” the president
said after watching the launch of a SpaceX rocket. “Healing, not hatred,
justice, not chaos, are the missions at hand.” Police were in
tactical gear. The D.C. National Guard was activated at the direction of
the secretary of the Army and at the request of the Park Police to help
maintain order near the White House, Commanding Gen. William J. Walker
said in a post on the Guard's Facebook page.
A firework explodes by a police line as demonstrators gather to
protest the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, near the
White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
While some protesters stayed near the White House,
others marched through the streets chanting, “No justice and no peace.”
and “Say his name: George Floyd.” The mood was angry and several
speakers implored marchers to remain peaceful. The march paused
between the Washington Monument and the National Museum of African
American History and Culture. Demonstrators sat down in the street for a
moment of silence lasting for the eight minutes or more that the
Minneapolis police officer reportedly knelt on Floyd's neck.
Police in riot gear stand in front of the White House as
demonstrators gather to protest the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May
30, 2020, outside the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
At the Lincoln Memorial, one organizer spoke over a
megaphone. “Look to the left and to the right and thank that person. We
can't hug anybody because of COVID, but I love you anyway.” Many of the
protesters wore masks, but did not socially distance themselves. Another
group circled through the Capitol Hill neighborhood for at least an
hour in cars, honking. A helicopter hovered overhead. In a series
of tweets earlier Saturday, Trump doubted protesters' allegiance to
Floyd’s memory, saying they were “professionally managed.” Trump
later rejected the suggestion that he was stoking a potential conflict
between protesters and his supporters. “I was just asking. But I have no
idea if they are going to be here," he said. “MAGA is Make America
Great Again. By the way, they love African American people. They love
black people.” At Saturday's demonstration, there was no evidence of a counter-move by Trump supporters.
Demonstrators gather to protest the death of George Floyd,
Saturday, May 30, 2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP
Photo/Alex Brandon)
The president also criticized the mayors of Washington and Minneapolis. Trump
said Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey “is probably a very good person, but
he’s a radical, left mayor.” He then described how he watched as a
police station in the city was overrun. “For that police station to be
abandoned and taken over, I’ve never seen anything so horrible and
stupid in my life," Trump said when speaking briefly to reporters at the
White House. He said Minnesota officials have to get tougher with rioters, and that by doing so they would be honoring the memory of Floyd.
Demonstrators gather to protest the death of George Floyd,
Saturday, May 30, 2020, near the White House in Washington. (AP
Photo/Evan Vucci)
The Secret Service said in a statement Saturday that
six protesters were arrested in Washington and “multiple” officers were
injured. There were no details on the charges or nature of the injuries.
A spokesman for U.S. Park Police said their officers made no arrests,
but several suffered minor injuries and one was taken to a hospital
after being struck in the helmet by a projectile. Acting Homeland
Security Secretary Chad Wolf on Saturday called the protesters
“criminals” who committed “acts of violence while hiding behind their
First Amendment right of lawful protest.” Late Saturday and early
Sunday, protesters vented their rage by breaking into tony shops of
Georgetown, on the western edge of the District, and in downtown
Washington, breaking windows and glass doors of many stores and looting
some of them. In his tweeting, Trump claimed that many Secret
Service agents were “just waiting for action” and ready to unleash “the
most vicious dogs, and the most ominous weapons, I have ever seen." His
reference to “vicious dogs” potentially being sicced on protesters
revisits images from the civil rights movement when marchers faced
snarling police dogs and high-pressure fire hoses.
China fired back at the United States' concerns with Hong Kong's freedom by pointing directly at the racial unrest that has exploded in America, simply tweeting, "I can't breathe".
Tweets
from Hua Chunying, a foreign ministry spokesperson, came as the U.S.
struggles with nationwide riots that have erupted in response to George
Floyd's death in Minneapolis. Her "I can't breathe" attack touched
a nerve as both Floyd and Eric Garner -- both unarmed black men --
uttered that expression moments before they died, while facing what many
believe was excessive force by police. State Department
spokesperson Morgan Ortegus had castigated China for the way it treated
Hong Kong protesters. "Freedom-loving people around the world must stand
with the rule of law and hold to account the Chinese Communist Party,
which has flagrantly broken its promises to the people of Hong Kong,"
Ortagus said. That
tweet was just the latest in an apparent strategy of China accusing the
U.S. government of hypocrisy as it faced criticism for the way it
countered pro-Democracy protests in Hong Kong. Most recently, President
Trump has announced that he would block Hong Kong's trading privileges
after China's ceremonial parliament voted to bypass the semi-autonomous
territory in enacting national security legislation. In another
tweet, Hua posted a segment from RT, which is funded by the Russian
government, blasting the U.S. for supporting violent protests in Hong
Kong while denouncing rioters as "thugs."
Iran
similarly attacked the U.S., tweeting an altered press release in which
the State Department attacked Iran amid ongoing protests in 2018. "Some don't think #BlackLivesMatter,"
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said. "To those of us who do: it
is long overdue for the entire world to wage war against racism. Time
for a #WorldAgainstRacism." Hua also suggested the U.S. employed similar regulations and likened Hong Kong to China's "hand." Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo set the stage for Trump’s announcement by
notifying Congress on Wednesday that Hong Kong no longer has the high
degree of autonomy that it is guaranteed under the “one country, two
systems” framework. Trump said Friday that his administration
would begin eliminating the “full range” of agreements that had given
Hong Kong a relationship with the U.S. that mainland China lacked,
including exemptions from controls on certain exports. “China has
replaced its promised formula of one country, two systems, with one
country, one system,” he said, echoing statements by pro-democracy
activists in Hong Kong.
A
Hong Kong government statement accused Trump and his administration of
smearing and demonizing the government’s duty to safeguard national
security and called allegations that the security law would undermine
individual freedoms “simply fallacious.” “President Trump’s claim
that Hong Kong now operated under ‘one country, one system’ was
completely false and ignored the facts on the ground,” the statement
said. Separately, Hong Kong Secretary for Justice Teresa Cheng
told reporters that it was “completely false and wrong” to say the
territory was losing its autonomy.
Governors in nearly a dozen states plus the District of Columbia have now activated the National Guard amid protests and riots that have broken out in response to George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis police custody earlier this week.
States
calling for Guard asistance were California, Georgia, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Washington state. "Based on circumstances going on in Reno and at the request of local leaders, I have activated members of the @nvnationalguard to secure government buildings," Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak tweeted early Sunday, Eastern time. Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee also activated the National Guard, at the request of the mayor of Nashville. "I
am authorizing the National Guard to mobilize in response to protests
that have now taken a violent, unlawful turn in Nashville," he tweeted.
"The threat to both peace and property is unacceptable and we will work
with local law enforcement and community leaders to restore safety and
order. This is not a reflection of our state or the fundamental American
right to peaceful protest." Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, after
discussions with state and local leaders, also signed an order
"authorizing the activation of up to 3,000 National Guard troops
statewide ahead of several planned protests on Sunday, May 31." "These
highly trained citizen soldiers will partner will law enforcement to
preserve peace and protect Georgians in every corner of our great
state," he added.
Kemp's move comes amid protests in Atlanta, and across the state Saturday. Earlier in the night, Abbott announced he was activating the National Guard, saying: “Texans have every right to exercise their first amendment rights, but violence and looting will not be tolerated.” Missouri
Gov. Mike Parson also activated the National Guard late Saturday, and
the Missouri Highway Patrol. Parson also declared "that a State of
Emergency exists in Missouri due to civil unrest." Kemp and Abbott and Parson joined Utah, Ohio and Washington state in bringing in the National Guard to aid law enforcement. Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, on Saturday night, tweeted that Utah “condemns violence and looting.” “I
have activated the National Guard to help control the escalating
situation in downtown Salt Lake City,” Herbert tweeted. “I once again
call on all who are protesting to do so peacefully.”
Earlier Saturday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine also called to service the Ohio National Guard “to help protect the citizens of Ohio.” Protests erupted in Columbus, Cleveland and Cincinnati, Ohio Saturday. Ohio Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, attended a protest earlier in the day Saturday and was sprayed with pepper spray by law enforcement officers. "In
this time of deep anger, sadness, and frustration, we stand with those
who are expressing their First Amendment rights, but we will not stand
for those who wish to inflict pain and cause destruction," DeWine
tweeted. Meanwhile, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee “activated 200 members” at the request of Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan. "They
will be unarmed and assist with infrastructure protection and crowd
movement," Inslee said in a statement Saturday. "They will only be
utilized if absolutely necessary and we appreciate their efforts to help
in this important work." The District of Columbia National Guard
also was activated Saturday night “at the direction of the Secretary of
the Army in response to a request for assistance from the U.S. Park
Police to help maintain order during protests in the vicinity of the
White House,” D.C. National Guard Commanding General MG William J.
Walker said in a statement.
“The
DCNG, the Nation’s only Federal National Guard, reports to the
President of the United States through the Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of the Army,” Walker said. “The DCNG is always ready to assist
District and Federal agencies to protect human life and property.” Meanwhile,
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said late Saturday night that he had
asked California Gov. Gavin Newsom to send the National Guard to the
county. "This is no longer a protest,” Garcetti told local media Saturday night. “This is destruction. This is vandalism.” The
activation of the National Guard in states across the nation comes
after Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz already announced early Saturday that he
authorized the “full mobilization” of the state’s National Guard in
response to violent riots in the state. Minnesota’s National Guard is composed of more than 13,000 soldiers, according to the Guard’s 2019 annual report. Floyd’s
death Monday has sparked unrest across the U.S., from New York City to
Washington, D.C., to Chicago to Los Angeles. Four Minneapolis police
officers were fired Tuesday, while the officer seen kneeling on Floyd's
neck for several minutes before he eventually died, Derek Chauvin, has
been arrested and charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter.
Fox News’ Barnini Chakraborty, Dom Calicchio, Lucas Tomlinson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Los Angeles
Mayor Eric Garcetti said the California National Guard is being
deployed to Los Angeles overnight Saturday as the nation's
second-largest city faces another night of rioting in response to the
death of George Floyd.
"The
California National Guard is being deployed to Los Angeles overnight to
support our local response to maintain peace and safety on the streets
of our city," Garcetti tweeted late Saturday night. Garcetti,
earlier Saturday, was dismissive of seeking National Guard aid, but as
the protests intensified Saturday, requested that California Gov. Gavin
Newsom activate the force. “This is no longer a protest,” Garcetti told local media Saturday night. “This is destruction. This is vandalism.” Garcetti’s
comments came just after he imposed a citywide curfew, requiring
residents of Los Angeles to “stay indoors” starting at 8 p.m. until 5:30
a.m. Sunday. “I will always protect Angelenos’ right to make
their voices heard — and we can lead the movement against racism without
fear of violence or vandalism,” Garcetti said in a statement Saturday. “The
vast majority of people taking to the streets are doing it peacefully,
powerfully, and with reverence for the sacred cause they’re fighting
for,” he continued. “This curfew is in place to protect their safety —
and the safety of all who live and work in our city.”
Garcetti’s decision came amid large protests in Los Angeles on Saturday, and following rioting earlier in the week. In L.A., rioters on Wednesday night at one point were seen burning an upside-down American flag. The protests and riots broke out across the nation after Floyd died in Minneapolis police custody Monday. An
employee at a grocery store called police and accused Floyd of trying
to pass a counterfeit $20 bill. Floyd, who is black, was then arrested
and handcuffed by Officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, and pushed to the
ground. Chauvin and three other officers were fired Tuesday in
connection with Floyd's death, then Chauvin was arrested Friday on
murder and manslaughter charges.
A
cell phone video shows Floyd’s head is turned to the side and he does
not appear to be resisting. Chauvin had his knee pressed to the back of
Floyd’s neck for several minutes as Floyd is seen gasping for air and
begging Chauvin to stop. He does not. Bystanders say they also heard
shouting at Chauvin to take his knee off of Floyd’s neck. Floyd, 46, died in police custody Monday night. Chauvin was charged Friday with third-degree murder and manslaughter in Minnesota. Fox News' Lee Ross and Barnini Chakraborty contributed to this report.