Victim in Virginia melee wept for social
justice, her boss says
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[August 14, 2017]
By Bernie Woodall
(Reuters) - Heather Heyer came to downtown
Charlottesville with her friends to make a stand against white
nationalists who converged on the Virginia college town to demand the
city keep a statue honoring a Confederate war hero, her boss said on
Sunday.
The 32-year-old paralegal wanted to send a clear message to the
neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan sympathizers who planned to stage one of the
largest far-right rallies in recent U.S. history that people abhor their
views in the city where she was born, he said.
But her decision to join counter-protesters on Saturday resulted in
tragedy when a 20-year-old Ohio man drove his car at high speed into a
line of marchers, killing Heyer and injuring at least 19 others.
A strong sense of social justice was a constant theme in Heyer's
personal and working life, said Alfred Wilson, bankruptcy division
manager at the Miller Law Group.
"There have been times that I've walked back to her office and she had
tears in her eyes" for various injustices she saw in the world, said
Wilson, such as the time she was weeping after reading anti-Muslim
comments online, Wilson said.
Heyer was "a very strong, very opinionated young woman" who "made known
that she was all about equality," he told Reuters on Sunday.
The two have worked closely since Heyer joined the firm a little more
than five years ago.
"Purple was her favorite color," said Wilson, recalling that Heyer
shared a duplex apartment in Charlottesville with a beloved pet
Chihuahua named Violet. "She would wear purple a lot, and she would wear
it every day if she could get away with it."
Born in Charlottesville, the home of the University of Virginia's main
campus, Heyer was raised in a nearby town and graduated from William
Monroe High School in Stanardsville.
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An undated photo from the Facebook account of Heather Heyer, who was
killed August 12, 2017 when a car plowed into a crowd of
counter-protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S. Heather Heyer
via Facebook/Handout via REUTERS
A big part of Heyer's job was to help people who were trying to
avoid being evicted from their homes, or have their cars
repossessed, or needed help paying medical bills, he said.
Heyer was a supporter of Bernie Sanders, who ran unsuccessfully for
the Democratic presidential nomination won by Hillary Clinton,
Wilson said.
As a white woman, she thought it unfair that she enjoyed liberties
that Wilson, as a black man, did not, he said.
"You're college-educated, but if you walk into the store you may
have people following you, and it's not fair," Wilson quoted Heyer
as having said to him often.
Heyer, said Wilson, was strongly opposed to President Donald Trump,
and she also spoke out against Jason Kessler, the blogger who
organized the "Unite the Right" rally that was broken up before it
began on Saturday.
"A big thing that bothered Heather was this whole past election,"
said Wilson. "She would literally sit in the office and cry at times
because she was worried about what was going to happen to the
country."
(Reporting by Bernie Woodall in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Editing by
Frank McGurty and Chris Reese)
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