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Vows of peace, fears of violence at Virginia gun rally

Published 01/19/2020, 06:49 PM
Updated 01/19/2020, 06:49 PM
© Reuters. A man watches from a diner as supporters of the continued display of Confederate generals’ statues and other symbols march with Confederate flags in Lexington, Virginia

© Reuters. A man watches from a diner as supporters of the continued display of Confederate generals’ statues and other symbols march with Confederate flags in Lexington, Virginia

By Brad Brooks

RICHMOND, Virginia (Reuters) - The top Republican in Virginia's lower house said that any group planning to incite violence at a large gun rights rally on Monday in Richmond should stay home, while far-right leaders of militias planning to attend swore they were coming in peace.

Richmond was braced on Sunday for the rally, aimed at showing gun enthusiasts' disdain for swift moves the newly Democrat-controlled legislature is making to pass stiffer gun laws - and many residents feared a repeat of violence seen at a white supremacist rally in nearby Charlottesville in 2017.

But several militia leaders with large followings on social media who attended that Charlottesville rally said they were coming purely to show their support for those opposed to new, more restrictive gun laws in the state.

"If you think that we're a threat coming into your city, then you don't know who we are, you don't understand what we're about," said Joshua Shoaff, who has over 542,000 Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) followers and goes by the pseudonym Ace Baker. "We're not anarchists - we believe in government."

Other leaders of well-known militias also vowed they were not seeking confrontations in Richmond. But police warned that among those they know to be attending are known neo-Nazis and other groups who may seek to hijack the gun-rights gathering.

Authorities say they are expecting several thousand people and are trying to keep the event from becoming violent.

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam this week temporarily banned all weapons from the area around the Capitol ahead of the demonstration.

Todd Gilbert, the Republican leader in Virginia's House of Delegates, said in a statement on Saturday that violence was not welcome during Monday's rally.

"Any group that comes to Richmond to spread white supremacist garbage, or any other form of hate, violence, or civil unrest isn't welcome here," he said. "While we and our Democratic colleagues may have differences, we are all Virginians and we will stand united in opposition to any threats of violence or civil unrest from any quarter."

Monday's rally is being organized by the Virginia Citizens Defense League, a pro-gun rights group that annually comes out in force to lobby Virginia's legislature to not pass any new gun laws.

The group is working closely with police, according to law enforcement officials, in an effort to pull off a smooth event - but they have called for tens of thousands of armed citizens to come to the event, hiking tensions.

President Donald Trump backed the rally organizers in a Twitter post on Friday in which he said the U.S. Constitution was under attack by recent gun control measures in Virginia, a state that Hilary Clinton won in 2016 and where Democrats took full control of the state legislature for the first time in a generation in November.

"Your 2nd Amendment is under very serious attack in the Great Commonwealth of Virginia," Trump wrote in the post, referring to the amendment in the Bill of Rights that gives Americans the right to keep and bear firearms. "That's what happens when you vote for Democrats, they will take your guns away."

The Virginia Senate late on Thursday passed bills to require background checks on all firearms sales, limit handgun purchases to one a month, and restore local governments' right to ban weapons from public buildings and other venues.

© Reuters. A man watches from a diner as supporters of the continued display of Confederate generals’ statues and other symbols march with Confederate flags in Lexington, Virginia

Both Virginia legislative houses are also expected to pass "red flag" laws that would allow courts and local law enforcement to remove guns from people deemed a risk to communities, among other measures.

Latest comments

Let me get thi straight and attempt too make common sense ?! One group appears with signs aproaching this thing "Peacefully " as the Gorillas approach this thing well armed ready for war ????! Whats wrong with this picture that wont be veiwed for what it is ?! My 3 yr old daughter has a special occasion popping up ?! Maybe instead of my suit i'll place on the old FlaxJacket, Grenades, 45, Ar 15 and bazooka ?! Who knows, one of those kids may have a Nuclear booger ?! LMFAO !!!
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