Clash at California capitol leaves at
least 10 injured
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[June 27, 2016]
By Eric M. Johnson and Justin Madden
(Reuters) - At least 10 people were
injured at a rally outside the California state capitol in Sacramento on
Sunday as members of a white supremacist group clashed with
counter-protesters, authorities said.
The melee erupted during a rally staged by the Traditionalist
Worker Party, described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a
white nationalist extremist group.
One of its leaders, Matt Parrott, said the party had called the
demonstration in part to protest against violence that has broken
out outside recent rallies by Donald Trump, the presumptive
Republican presidential nominee.
The incident may fuel concerns about the potential for violent
protests outside the major party conventions in Cleveland and
Philadelphia this summer and in the run-up to the Nov. 8
presidential election.
"With the eyes of the world's media on both Philadelphia and
Cleveland, no doubt there will be significant protests," said
Democratic strategist Steve Schale. "The extreme rhetoric, combined
with the nonstop media attention, does encourage these kinds of
events."
In Sacramento, when the white supremacists arrived at the capitol
building at about noon on Sunday, "counter-protesters immediately
ran in - hundreds of people - and they engaged in a fight," said
George Granada, a spokesman for the Capitol Protection Service
division of the California Highway Patrol.
In announcing the counter-protest, a group called Anti-Fascist
Action Sacramento said on its website that it had a "moral duty" to
deny a platform for "Nazis from all over the West Coast" to voice
their views.
"We have a right to self defense. That is why we have to shut them
down," Yvette Felarca, a counter-protester wearing a white bandage
on her head, told reporters after the clash.
The Sacramento Fire Department said 10 patients were treated at area
hospitals for multiple stabbing and laceration wounds.
None of the injuries were life-threatening and there were no
immediate reports of arrests, Granada said. The building was placed
on lockdown.
Matthew Heimbach, chairman of Traditionalist Worker Party, said his
group had expected violence even though it planned a peaceful rally
and had a permit.
"We were there to support nationalism. We are white nationalists,"
Heimbach told Reuters. "We were there to take a stand."
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Anti-fascist counter-protestors parade through Sacramento after
multiple people were stabbed during a clash between neo-Nazis
holding a permitted rally and counter-protestors on Sunday at the
state capitol in Sacramento, California, United States, June 26,
2016. REUTERS/Max Whittaker
Representatives of the Sacramento police could not be reached
immediately for further comment.
Video footage on social media showed dozens of people, some of them
wearing masks and wielding what appeared to be wooden bats, racing
across the capitol grounds and attacking others.
Photos on social media showed emergency officials treating a victim
on the grass in the area as police officers stood guard.
The melee comes about four months after four people were stabbed
during a scuffle between members of the Ku Klux Klan and
counter-protesters near a KKK rally in Anaheim, California.
In recent months Trump has blamed "professional agitators" and
"thugs" for violence that has broken out at many of the Republican
candidate's rallies.
In Albuquerque, New Mexico, last month, anti-Trump protesters threw
rocks and bottles at police officers who responded with pepper
spray. A month earlier, some 20 demonstrators were arrested outside
a Trump rally in Costa Mesa, California.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle, Fiona Ortiz and Justin
Madden in Chicago; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by Chris Reese)
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