NASCAR steps up security around
Wallace after noose found in garage
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[June 23, 2020]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - NASCAR has stepped up
security around Bubba Wallace for the rain-delayed Geico 500 at
Talladega Superspeedway on Monday after a noose was found in the
driver's garage.
The only Black driver in NASCAR's top series and a vocal supporter
of Black Lives Matter, Wallace was the target of a racial attack on
Sunday when a noose, a symbol connected to lynching and America's
slave history, was left in his team stall.
NASCAR president Steve Phelps vowed to use all available resources
to uncover the identity of the person responsible for the racist
attack and have them banned from the sport for life.
Earlier on Monday the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Northern
District of Alabama said the FBI is reviewing the situation
surrounding the noose to determine whether there are violations of
federal law.
"We are going to use every effort we can to determine who has done
this, whether it's a single person or multiple people," Phelps said
during a conference call on Monday.
"I know that the director of the FBI has informed the Birmingham
office to use all their resources to find it as well.
"Unequivocally, they will be banned from this sport for life. There
is no room for this at all and we won't tolerate it.
"I don't care who they are, they will not be here."
The incident has put NASCAR on high alert for Monday's race which
was already operating under tight security due to the novel
coronavirus outbreak. Only 5000 fans were allowed into the sprawling
superspeedway and access to the infield and pit areas was also
restricted.
CONFEDERATE FLAGS
"We want to make sure that Bubba is safe and we have stepped up
security," confirmed Phelps, adding he had personally told Wallace
about the noose on Sunday.
"This is a family that needs to take care of one of its family
members whose been attacked.
"We will firmly support as an industry, as a family and a community
to make sure Bubba and everyone else in this sport is safe."
Wallace was also one of the loudest voices in the push to have
NASCAR remove the Confederate flag from its tracks.
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NASCAR Cup Series driver Bubba Wallace (43) during the Daytona 500
at Daytona International Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mike Dinovo-USA
TODAY Sports/File Photo
Since the May 25 death of George Floyd, an Africa-American man who
died after a white policeman knelt on his neck for nearly nine
minutes, there have been calls to remove objects honoring the
Confederacy, which defended slavery.
While some in the South see the flag as a source of pride and a
remembrance of its soldiers who died in the Civil War, many
Americans see it as a symbol of oppression and of a dark chapter in
American history.
In the wake of the nationwide protests against racism, NASCAR
announced earlier this month that Confederate flags would be
prohibited from all events and properties.
Despite NASCAR's ruling, outside the Alabama track on Sunday there
were still plenty of Confederate flags flying and merchandise for
sale.
Prior to the race, a small plane flew above the superspeedway with a
banner of the Confederate flag trailing another that read "DEFUND
NASCAR."
Alabama governor Kay Ivey on Monday condemned the act and apologized
to Wallace, a native of Mobile, calling the 26-year-old "one of us".
"Racism and threats of this nature will not be condoned nor
tolerated, and I commit to assisting in any way possible to ensure
that the person responsible for this is caught and punished," said
Ivey in a statement.
NASCAR was among the top-three trending topics on Twitter in the
U.S. on Monday, with supporters of Wallace using the hashtag #IStandWithBubba.
In a show of unity, the hashtag was painted on the infield at
Talladega ahead of Monday's race.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, additional reporting Frank
Pingue. Editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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