Police used pepper spray to break up a North Carolina march to a polling place

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According to a statement from the Graham Police Department, officers pepper sprayed the ground to disperse the crowd when the demonstration was deemed “unsafe and unlawful” due to unspecified “actions.”

But Scott Huffman, a North Carolina Democratic congressional candidate who attended the march, said demonstrators were only exercising their First Amendment rights when law enforcement used the pepper spray in Graham, about 30 miles east of Greensboro.

The “I Am Change” march was branded as a “march to the polls” where participants were encouraged to march in honor of Black people whose deaths have fueled protests over racial injustice, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Trayvon Martin, among others, according to a flyer for the event.

Attorney Ben Crump, who represents the families of numerous victims of police brutality, was scheduled to speak at the event, the flyer shows, along with Brooke Williams, George Floyd’s niece.

Video published by the Raleigh News & Observer appears to show demonstrators and law enforcement scuffling over sound equipment in front of the Graham courthouse. Alamance County Sheriff’s deputies wearing gray uniforms soon deploy pepper spray, and at least one deputy is seen spraying a man in the face. Others spray toward demonstrators’ feet.

At least eight people were arrested during the rally on various charges, including failure to disperse and one instance of assault on a law enforcement officer, Graham police said.

The Alamance County Sheriff’s Office said it made arrests at the demonstration, citing “violations of the permit” the organizer, the Rev. Gregory Drumwright, a pastor and activist, obtained to hold the rally.

“Mr. Drumwright chose not to abide by the agreed upon rules,” the sheriff’s office said. “As a result, after violations of the permit, along with disorderly conduct by participants leading to arrests, the protest was deemed an unlawful assembly and participants were asked to leave.”

Drumwright was among the several people arrested, according to his administrative assistant Tanisha Richards.

March to polling place included stop at courthouse

The rally was scheduled from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. ET starting from Wayman’s Chapel AME church, with an expected stop at the Confederate Monument at Court Square, before ending at a polling place on Elm Street, according to the flyer for the event.

But once at Court Square, police decided to disperse the crowd, according to Graham police, after people stopped in the road for about nine minutes, causing traffic to back up. The police statement said the march organizers were told that blocking a roadway was a “prohibited activity that would be strictly enforced.”

Officers with the Graham Police Department told members of the crowd to move back to the designated areas near the Graham courthouse, but when they did not, police “utilized a crowd control measure that consisted of spraying a pepper based vapor on the ground.”

The crowd then moved to the designated area. But later, “as a result of actions that occurred within the rally,” law enforcement deemed the rally “unsafe and unlawful,” police said, without describing demonstrators’ “actions.”

The crowd was ordered to disperse and was warned several time that pepper spray would be deployed if it failed to do so. After five minutes, several people remained and officers again pepper sprayed the ground, the sheriff’s office said.

“At no time during this event did any member of the Graham Police Department directly spray any participant in the march with chemical irritants,” police said.

Richards said she was still working to catch her breath Saturday after experiencing what she deemed to be tear gas, as the marchers were preparing to go to the polling station.

“There were people who didn’t get to the poll because they were tear-gassed,” she said.

Drumwright told NPR he couldn’t call it an effort to suppress the vote, but “that’s what happened.”

NC Democratic leader says actions are ‘voter suppression’

Huffman, the congressional candidate, said in his video that the demonstrators had obtained proper permits. “Peaceful protests for Souls to the Polls & Black Lives Matter turned violent because law enforcement tried to take the sound equipment,” he tweeted.

Rain Bennett, another attendee, told CNN that demonstrators stopped at Court Square for an eight-minute moment of silence for George Floyd following the march, and that “police presence was there and they had no problem with that.”

But then Bennett saw what he described as a “commotion” and people began screaming. He saw a woman who was hurt and then smelled pepper spray.

“Everybody is coughing and kind of running away,” he said, adding that it was “really confusing because it’d been fine.”

Some officers were allowing the protesters to march, but others weren’t, Richards said, which she attributes to a breakdown in communication between departments.

But the demonstrators maintained a peaceful energy throughout the rally, she said. At one point, Drumwright asked the crowd “did anybody come here to do anything other than be peaceful?” and the whole crowd answered that they were there for peace, Richards said.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper shared the Raleigh News & Observer’s article about the march on Twitter and called the incident “unacceptable.”

“Peaceful demonstrators should be able to have their voices heard and voter intimidation in any form cannot be tolerated,” the governor said.

North Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Wayne Goodwin issued a statement condemned the actions of law enforcement, calling them “completely unwarranted police hostility and voter suppression.”

“It is egregious that local law enforcement would conduct themselves this way. North Carolinians are no strangers to voter suppression and intimidation — we know it when we see it,” Goodwin said. “The North Carolina Democratic Party calls for swift and clear consequences for the offending officers.”

Patrick Gannon, a spokesman for the North Carolina State Board of Elections, said the incident did not impact voting.

“Voting continues and was not interrupted,” Gannon said.

But poll greeter Jane Peppler, who was working at the polling station on Elm Street, said that doesn’t mean people weren’t discouraged by what happened.

“We thought there would be tons of people coming in after this event,” Peppler told CNN. “We had extra people come on hand because the idea of this was that this gathering would end at the polls, but they broke it up over there at the courthouse before they ever got here.”

CNN’s Dianne Gallagher and Pamela Kirkland contributed to this report.





Source : Nbcnewyork