Most of the biggest stories we followed this year were fallout
from 2017: both the direct effects of the Unite the Right rally, with
its continuing arrests and trials, and the continued furor over
monuments, free speech, and present-day inequities as our city grapples with its full history.
Martial law for August 12 anniversary
Understandably there was some trepidation about the first anniversary of the white supremacist, neo-Nazi invasion, but a heavy police presence that was 1,000 officers strong, Downtown Mall lockdown, checkpoints, and mandatory searches raised new concerns.
James Fields trial
The Ohio man who mowed down a crowd of citizens on Fourth Street was found guilty on 10 counts, including first-degree murder for the death of Heather Heyer. For the survivors who marched on Fourth Street after the verdict, it was a step in taking their lives—and their streets—back.
August 12 arrests
The year saw nonstop court dates and some heavy sentences meted out, particularly for the assault of DeAndre Harris in the Market Street Parking Garage. Four men were charged, and two have already been sentenced to six and eight years in prison. “Crying Nazi” Chris Cantwell was banned from Virginia for five years, and Maryland Confederate White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan imperial wizard Richard Preston will spend four years in jail for firing a gun at the rally.
Pilgrimage to Montgomery
A group of about 100 citizens traveled to the Equal Justice Initiative’s new lynching memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, bringing soil from the site where John Henry James was lynched in 1898 (now owned by Farmington Country Club). The pilgrims hit every civil rights museum and landmark on the way, learning more about this nation’s painful legacy of anti-black terrorism and how that plays out in the present.
Amtrak crash in Crozet
A chartered train carrying GOP congressmen to the Greenbrier in West Virginia slammed into a garbage truck on the tracks January 31, killing Time Disposal employee Christopher Foley, 28. Driver Dana Naylor, who tested positive for pot, was charged with involuntary manslaughter and DUI maiming.
Keith Woodard has enough
The would-be developer of West2nd, which would have housed the City Market and other retail on a city-owned parking lot, pulled the plug on the luxury condo project. After facing a new City Council, less supportive than the one in place when he started work on West2nd nearly five years ago, Woodard decided to stop jumping through hoops to build it.
Flash flood kills two
Ivy is not known for flash flooding, but as much as nine inches of rain came down May 30, turning Ivy Creek into a raging river that swept two cars off Old Ballard Road and killed a White Hall couple. Ten water rescues were made during the storm and nearly 40 county roads were closed.
Racial inequity in schools makes national news
A New York Times/ProPublica story in October on widening achievement gaps between white and black students in Charlottesville schools rocked the community, prompting soul searching and ongoing discussion about causes and solutions.
Changing of the guard
The year saw lots of turnover—and not all of it was related to the events of 2017.
In
Nikuyah Walker
It’s safe to say there’s no one else quite like her. The Charlottesville native ran for council as an independent under the campaign promise of “unmasking the illusion,” and as the city’s first black female mayor, she could also be its No. 1 advocate for transparency. She’s become an international sensation, traveling to Ghana and France, and appearing on “The View” and “Face the Nation.” Whether she’s bashing local media on Facebook Live or keeping councilors and council-watchers in check on the dais, with frequent 4-1 votes, Walker has shown that she’s not afraid to go her own way.
Jim Ryan
The university’s ninth president, who packed up and moved into Pavilion VIII this summer, made his first impression on many incoming Wahoos during move-in, when he disguised himself as a greeter and helped families unload their kids and their belongings. He immediately tackled the anniversary of August 11, 2017, when white supremacists marched across Grounds, by apologizing to the students and faculty who weren’t protected that day—something his predecessor never did. Ryan is also known for inviting students and community members on his early-morning runs, and they often turn up in droves.
RaShall Brackney
The city officially welcomed its first female police chief in June. When former chief Al Thomas abruptly resigned a year ago, city officials initiated a months-long search and selected Brackney out of 169 candidates. Mayor Nikuyah Walker, a critic of local police profiling and mass incarceration, called her initial interview with the former George Washington University chief and Pittsburgh police commander “refreshing.”
Joe Platania
Charlottesville’s top prosecutor took his post as commonwealth’s attorney in January after defeating local civil rights attorney Jeff Fogel for the spot that Dave Chapman held for nearly 25 years. Platania, who had worked under Chapman since 2003, angered many activists by choosing to prosecute DeAndre Harris and two other local African American men for fighting white supremacists on August 12. But he is the only law enforcement representative to so far suggest that the local jail stop voluntarily notifying federal immigration agents of undocumented inmates’ release dates. And he got national facetime for taking on the biggest case of the year—the first-degree murder trial of August 12 car attacker James Fields—alongside prosecutor Nina Antony.
Brian Wheeler
The former executive director of Charlottesville Tomorrow made waves when he left his news nonprofit in February to become the city’s new director of communications—a job most were sure no one could ever want after the PR nightmare the city faced when Charlottesville became a national hashtag.
Denver Riggleman
Though this defense contractor and distiller has never been a fan favorite in blue Charlottesville, the newly elected Republican 5th District congressman didn’t have much trouble defeating Democrat Leslie Cockburn. While their stances on many issues were actually quite similar—including decriminalizing marijuana and opposing the Atlantic Coast Pipeline—only one of them has been mocked nationally for being an alleged “devotee of Bigfoot erotica,” and here’s a hint: It wasn’t her.
Out
Boyd Tinsley
If something seemed different about the recent DMB concerts at JPJ, it likely was the absence of longtime violinist Tinsley, who exited the band in May after a Seattle man’s lawsuit alleged sexual assault, harassment, and long-term grooming. DMB claimed it knew nothing of Tinsley’s alleged predatory behavior, unlike the rest of Charlottesville, which lit up on social media over “Fiddlegate.”
Maurice Jones
The former city manager became another casualty of the August 12, 2017, debacle when Mayor Nikuyah Walker announced May 25 his contract would not be renewed. The former NBC29 sportscaster had served as city manager since 2010, and had stints as assistant city manager in 2008 and six years as director of communications starting in 1999. By July, Jones had landed a job as town manager in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, while Charlottesville still seeks a permanent CEO.
Tom Garrett
The one-term Republican 5th District congressman stunned constituents when he announced in May he would not seek reelection so he could deal with his alcoholism. The Buckingham resident also had to deal with a House Ethics Committee report that said he and his wife, Flanna, had inappropriately used staffers to do personal errands, including picking up dog poop, helping the couple move, and changing the oil in their car.
Steven Meeks
For years, former Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society board members approached reporters to urge a story about questionable board decisions at the society—but no one wanted to speak on the record. That changed last year after its membership had dropped 50 percent and the city threatened to not renew the society’s heavily subsidized lease in the McIntire Building. Amateur historian Meeks abruptly resigned February 11 amid accusations of bylaw violations and autocratic mismanagement.
Rob Jiranek
The former Daily Progress publisher was shown the door May 1 after a little more than two years of leading the struggling daily. Jiranek’s tenure earned a Columbia Journalism Review rebuke—“The outrageous editorial by a Charlottesville daily that preceded violence”—for an editorial that blamed the city’s only black councilor at the time, Wes Bellamy, for calling for the removal of Confederate statues and drawing white supremacists here. Jiranek, a former co-owner of C-VILLE, made a lasting mark at the Progress by tearing down the wall—literally—between advertising and editorial.
What they said
Nikuyah Walker was elected mayor at City Council’s first meeting in
January, and became our most quoted person of the year.
“I’m comfortable with making people uncomfortable.”
—January 2, at council’s first meeting of the year, which was unusual both for the public sniping among councilors and the fact that votes for mayor, normally cast behind closed doors, were made publicly.
“While it has been better, it has been very difficult to conduct the meetings and have business take place.”
—April 2, after clearing the chamber during another out-of-control City Council meeting
“This is an attempt to put me in my place.”
—In July, after fellow councilors ask
if she should recuse herself from
the selection of a new city manager
because she’s a temporary Parks
& Rec employee.
“How civil and orderly were the community members who auctioned offblack bodies in Court Square?”
—Walker responds October 24 to a Daily Progress op-ed on bullying at City Council meetings
“I didn’t respond to request for comment because I think these reporters are, a lot of them, not all of them…but the majority of these reporters, they have ill intentions and it’s not how I roll.”
—On Facebook Live December 5, responding—again—to a Progress article, this one about councilors’ credit card spending
And then there was everyone else…
“There was definitely a Festivus feel to it with the airing of the grievances.”
—Dave Norris referring to a “Seinfeld” episode in describing the no-holds-
barred public selection of mayor by City Council January 2
“That was a thorough butt-whupping.”
—UVA Coach Tony Bennett after the loss of his No. 1-seeded Cavaliers to No. 16-seed UMBC in the first round of the NCAA tournament
“I don’t think you can understand the country today if you don’t understand the legacies of slavery and how they have shaped our understanding of rights, freedoms, and opportunities.”
—Montpelier President & CEO Kat Imhoff at a February summit on teaching slavery
“We’re like a mosquito on the giant’s ankle.”
—Anti-pipeline activist Kay Ferguson
“An all-too-familiar story in my timeline: A beautiful woman’s life cut short by a violent relationship.”
—Trina Murphy, great aunt of murdered Nelson teen Alexis Murphy, after her
son Xavier Grant Murphy is charged with the June 22 slaying of his girlfriend
“There was no one that was searched that was not consensual.”
—Police Chief RaShall Brackney raising eyebrows of those who could not enter the Downtown Mall during the August 12 anniversary without agreeing to a search
When it comes to Charlottesville food and drink, there is no such thing as a bad year.
In 2018, MarieBette Café & Bakery unleashed its prezzant, a sorcerous pretzel and croissant hybrid, where buttery, delicate pastry gets an addictive umami boost from a dip in lye. Not to be outdone, Albemarle Baking Company launched Roman pizza, rectangular slices of room temperature ’zza made from a 48-hour naturally fermented dough, using organic wheat and whole wheat flour. Meanwhile, Reason Beer’s hop-forward Collaboration 29, a delicious IPA created in tribute to Charlottesville, won not just sentimentality points but also a major beer competition, where it earned top prize over some of the nation’s most acclaimed IPAs. At Prime 109, the Lampo team broke ground with steak cut from locally sourced heritage beef, dry-aged 60 days or more. And, after the ham biscuit was declared Charlottesville’s signature dish, an impeccable new version became a menu fixture at Ivy Inn.
Last but not least was my 2018 Dish of the Year: Fleurie’s Autumn Olive Farms’ Heritage Pork, Prepared Nose to Tail. Many elite chefs have worked wonders with the extraordinary products from Autumn Olive Farms, but never have I encountered a dish that better honors the farms’ hogs than this one. Read more about it at charlottesville29.com.—Simon Davidson
2018 saw a lot of happenings on the Charlottesville food and drink scene. Here’s a roundup of some of the biggest changes around town. —Jenny Gardiner
Welcome to town
Armando’s on the Corner for late-night Mexican eats
Augustiner Hall and Garden rolls out the barrels
Beijing Station from Marco & Luca Dumpling owners
Box’d Kitchen serves up meat or
veggies, over rice
Brewing Tree Beer Company, courtesy of Starr Hill founder
Druknya House brings a touch of Tibet to town
Farm Bell Kitchen cooks up Southern cuisine in the Dinsmore Boutique Inn
JBD Soul Food whips up catfish on Hinton Avenue
J-Petal scoops Thai rolled ice cream and more
Maru for Korean on the Downtown Mall
North American Sake Brewery, with vaunted Côte-Rôtie chef on board
Patisserie Torres delivers sweet and savory treats from Fleurie’s pastry chef
Peleton Station for bikes, beer, and noshes
Pho 3 Pho gives us uptown Pho on 29 North
Prime 109 launches to rave reviews and pricey beef
Rocket Coffee brings coffee and bagels to Crozet
Quality Pie converts the former Spudnuts space into a new café
Renewal, for West Main dining in the new Draftsman Hotel
Sicily Rose makes cannolis just like your nonna’s
Sugar Shack Baby Ruth donuts, anyone?
The Yard at 5th Street Station includes Basil Mediterranean, Extreme Pizza, and Chimm Thai
Leaving the scene
Back 40, Escafé, Greenie’s, Kebabish, La Taza, The Local Smokehouse (catering still available), Mono Loco
Pearl’s Bake Shoppe, Shark Mountain Coffee(at UVA’s iLab), Water Street, Zzaam! Fresh Korean Grill
A new lease on life
Aromas Café moves to Fontaine Research Park
The Clifton receives an overhaul, and adds a Michelin-starred executive chef
JM Stock gets a new owner, but keeps its amazing ham biscuits
Littlejohn’s New York Delicatessen also gets a new owner—and lowers its prices
Market Street Wine employees take over from longtime owner Robert Harlee
The Nook reopens after kitchen renovations
Pie Chest and Lone Light Coffee add a second location on High Street
Silk Thai Restaurant keeps it authentic in former Thai 99 space
Tavern & Grocery welcomes a new owner and a new “top” chef
Villa Diner moves to Emmet Street North corridor
Meals on wheels
Angelic’s Kitchen on Wheels
Bluegrass Creamery
FARMacy food truck
Firefly on the Fly
Good Waffles & Co.
OrderUp!
New Year’s wish
For Bang! to return rice balls and pork spring rolls to their rightful place on the menu. Sure, the tuna poke is delish, but isn’t there room for some old-school lovin’ too?
Among the many Christmas rituals going on at this time of year is the Mexican tradition of las posadas (literally, “the inns”), which commemorates Mary and Joseph’s search for shelter in Bethlehem. In the nine nights leading up to Christmas, families, friends, and neighbors go on a candlelight procession, knocking on doors and asking for a place to stay. When they reach the host’s home (sometimes a church) they are at last invited in, and a celebration begins.
It’s a fitting time, then, for this week’s cover story, which takes a look
at the everyday struggles of Charlottesville’s community of undocumented immigrants, and the local groups that have stepped in to offer them help and refuge. “To welcome the stranger is one of our greatest and most consistent religious commandments,” says the Reverend Brittany Caine-Conley, who
recently traveled with other local advocates to provide humanitarian aid to
migrants at the U.S. border.
Reasonable people can disagree about the particulars of our country’s
immigration laws. The question of who gets to stay here, and why, has been debated since the United States was founded. But you don’t have to be
religious to think that people fleeing danger and looking for a better life
deserve to be treated with decency and kindness.
The tradition of the posadas is a reminder that we, too, may at one point be the pilgrims, the ones seeking a safe place for our family to stay. And that if we are lucky enough to be the ones with the shelter, we can give the gift of welcome.
When Maria Chavalan-Sut talks about her life, she smiles. She laughs. Sometimes she cries.
The Guatemalan refugee came to America in 2015 and passed a credible fear interview at the border, meaning ICE believed that she would face persecution or torture if she was sent back to her country.
But her attorney says that, like in many other cases of asylum-seekers, the notice to appear in immigration court for her first hearing did not include a date or time. When she didn’t show up, a judge ordered her removal from the country.
The 44-year-old from Guatemala City was supposed to leave the country by September 30, but with a campaign called “Hands Off Maria” and dozens of local supporters behind her, she’s instead fighting her deportation order through the legal system with a motion to reopen her case, which is currently pending before an immigration judge in Arlington.
As Charlottesville’s first undocumented immigrant taking public sanctuary in a local church, she now wakes up every morning in a Sunday school classroom-converted-apartment at Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church.
It was in the same church’s sanctuary that she held a press conference in October, where she told reporters and community members her story through a Spanish interpreter.
“I have lived all of my life with violence,” she says. “My children are the reason I am fighting. I want them to live without all of the suffering I have experienced. Living in the church—this is the first time I can breathe; the first time I can sleep; the first time I have not felt afraid.”
Chavalan-Sut comes from a persecuted ethnic group—Guatemala’s indigenous Kaqchikel community—which makes her a good candidate for asylum, according to Richmond-based attorney Alina Kilpatrick, who represents her.
Though she survived the first-hand violence of a long-running civil war in her home country, in which her uncles and cousins were buried alive, and the persistent pressure of persecution, marginalization, and poverty, the final straw was when a local group pressured her to sell her property and threatened severe consequences if she didn’t.
When she refused, they lit her house on fire with her entire family inside of it. This is what Chavalan-Sut fled. This is what the judge has ordered her to go back to.
Under attack
As anti-immigration rhetoric ramps up across the country, largely thanks to the president and his supporters, many local groups have emerged to help protect and advocate for Charlottesville’s often unnoticed, but ever-present, community of undocumented immigrants.
Donald Trump, who called Mexican immigrants “rapists” and “drug dealers,” in his very first speech as a presidential candidate, has continued to demonize immigrants throughout his presidency. He has said the country’s undocumented people are, in fact, “not people,” but “animals,” that they “infest our country,” and that they’re coming into the United States from “shithole countries.” More recently, he’s repeatedly attacked the “migrant caravan” of men, women, and children seeking asylum at the U.S./Mexico border.
Perhaps surprisingly, Immigration and Custom Enforcement’s own data shows fewer deportations during the current president’s administration than during Barack Obama’s—from 240,255 ICE removals of undocumented immigrants in fiscal year 2016 to 226,119 in fiscal year 2017.
But under Trump, ICE has stepped up deportations of those already living in the country, from 65,332 people in fiscal year 2016 to 81,000 in fiscal year 2017 (the other deportations involve those turned away at the border). And the total number of ICE arrests went up 42 percent between those two years, according to the federal immigration agency.
That means that in Charlottesville, as elsewhere in the country, undocumented people who have built lives and families here are living in fear.
The greatest challenge they face isn’t one insurmountable obstacle, advocates say:It’s the everyday struggle of making a living without being noticed. It’s an ever-growing mountain of small, mundane tasks made more complicated by increased pressure from ICE and the current administration. It’s the struggle to stay under the radar, to live in the shadows. Because unlike the rest of us, if they make one wrong move, or if they’re at the wrong place at the wrong time, it could all be over.
In response, local organizations have stepped up to help. Some draw hundreds of affiliates and allies, and some have fewer than 10 members. Some are faith-based. Some are nonprofits. Some are made of young leaders and some host a more mature base of volunteers. But there’s at least one thing they all have in common: the shared idea that no human is illegal.
The silent struggle
“When we talk about the undocumented immigrant population, we’re really talking about a community that’s been part of the United States since before there was a United States,” says Edgar Lara, the director of community engagement at Sin Barreras, a small nonprofit that, among other things, connects Charlottesville’s community of migrants to immigration, health, legal, education, and banking services.
For Lara—who grew up in California with an undocumented single mother, and who spent several summers as a migrant worker in largely undocumented West Coast communities—the notion that immigrants have always been in the U.S. is important to consider when scrutinizing who has the legal right to live in this country.
As Lara puts it, a lot has changed throughout American history, and laws and borders are just two examples. “But the people have been here. This [undocumented] community has always done the work others with privilege won’t do, but we’ve created laws that exclude people and make them illegal.”
It’s not any different here in Charlottesville, he adds. A diverse community of undocumented people work, rent homes, and go to school in this city. And says Lara, they’re “just normal people living their lives, but under very difficult conditions.”
Here’s an example: Lara recently talked with a man at Sin Barreras who needed to have a document notarized. When a notary wasn’t immediately available, Lara says he explained to the man the simple process of how to go elsewhere for the service.
“And the person just kind of, they paused for a bit,” says Lara, adding that the man eventually said he’d rather wait in the Sin Barreras lobby, or come back another time. And when Lara asked why, the client said, “Well, it’s just different.”
When you’re undocumented, everything is different—and folded with layers of difficulty that most people don’t think about as they go through the minutiae of everyday life, whether that’s fear of being stopped by ICE, trouble navigating U.S. culture, or the fact that “people do look at them funny,” or judge them for their accents, Lara says.
The real struggle is “just the everyday living.”
“There’s small things, but it’s every day,” he adds, and while folks can sometimes work through them on their own, “other times, those little things can become big things. A lot of them are really huge things. And to everybody else, it’s something small.”
Like the inability to get permission to drive, which some advocates say is particularly inhumane.
In Virginia, unlike other states, undocumented people may not obtain driver’s licenses. But with few options for public transportation, that means they must risk driving illegally to get to work, or a medical appointment, or a child’s engagement.
“It’s the way most [undocumented] people around here get in trouble,” says Lara. “They can’t make a mistake or be in the wrong place without facing extra levels of punishment. Our government goes to great efforts to highlight and exaggerate the mistakes the undocumented community makes.”
He adds that they’re actually more likely to be the victims of crimes than to commit them. For instance, a study by the libertarian Cato Institute earlier this year found that native-born residents in Texas were much more likely to be convicted of a crime than either legal or undocumented immigrants. And a March study in the journal Criminology showed that places with higher percentages of undocumented immigrants tend to have less violent crime.
“There are over 10 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. and that scares a lot of people, but if they were really criminals, we would all truly know about it,” he says. “Using fear to create hate and anger has been an effective tool.”
Fighting stereotypes
A University of Virginia group called DREAMers on Grounds is working to extinguish those negative stereotypes, says fourth-year student Katherine Soba, who is president of the organization.
“Political rhetoric is becoming a lot more aggressive and violent,” she says, and many people have a false perception of this community of “hard-working people.” Oftentimes, undocumented people pay taxes for benefits like Social Security and Medicare that they can’t even use. Andthey don’t benefit from any federal aid or welfare, she adds, because they don’t have Social Security numbers.
Once a month, DREAMers on Grounds holds a well-attended “UndocuAlly” training for students, faculty, and community members that addresses those stigmas and stereotypes. The group takes its name from the DREAM Act, or Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, a piece of bipartisan legislation first introduced in 2001, that sought to help immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. After several versions of the bill failed to pass in Congress, the Obama administration established a stop-gap policy called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. DACA has allowed the children of undocumented immigrants to be eligible for work permits and deferred action from deportation.
In September 2017, when Donald Trump announced his plans to rescind DACA, hundreds of UVA students and community members, including folks with DREAMers on Grounds, met on the steps of Garrett Hall to call for permanent protection for all DACA recipients and their families.
Soba estimates that more than 50, but fewer than 100, UVA students have DACA status. And they’re ready to tackle the administration head-on.
At the rally, immigrants and their allies shouted in unison, “undocumented and unafraid!” Their calls reverberated off the columns of the surrounding buildings and amphitheater in the moment of solidarity.
“The phrase, as a concept, is there to empower the [undocumented] community and allies,” says Soba. “But being completely unafraid sometimes isn’t an option.”
That’s a sentiment echoed by Lara, who also attended that September 2017 rally, and who says those student leaders have a different mindset than other undocumented people living in Charlottesville.
“They’ve taken a lead and I think they’re a great example of what we hope for the entire community,” says Lara. “But I don’t think they’re there. …There’s still a lot of fear.”
ICE in Charlottesville
An ICE representative says agents haven’t conducted any raids here, and advocates of undocumented immigrants say most local ICE activity happens at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail.
The jail is required to notify ICE when an undocumented person is first taken into custody. But they also voluntarily give the federal agency a “courtesy call” immediately before an undocumented inmate’s release date, so agents can be there waiting for them.
Several local groups, including Sin Barreras and the newly formed ICE Out of Charlottesville, are aggressively advocating for an end to this voluntary cooperation.
According to the jail’s records, ICE picked up 25 people between July 2017 and June 2018 who were charged with crimes from the serious—malicious wounding, domestic assault—to those that are essentially a consequence of being undocumented, such as driving without a license or failure to appear in court.
A majority of ICE arrests across the country happen when undocumented people are released from jail, according to the Charlottesville-area Immigrant Resource & Advocacy Coalition. CIRAC’s stance is that immigration is a federal civil matter, not a state or local criminal matter, and therefore a local jail has no reason to voluntarily cooperate with federal immigration agents.
In October, the group launched the Cville Immigrant Bond Fund—a product of their previous work with a local undocumented man for whom they use the pseudonym Eduardo.
Last December, Eduardo’s attorney called on CIRAC for help when he was detained by ICE.
The Guatemalan man, who had lived and worked in Charlottesville for a decade, was stopped on Route 20 and arrested for driving without a license. When he left the local jail after serving his sentence, federal immigration agents were there waiting for him. They took him to the Farmville Detention Center—the closest one to Charlottesville—and then moved him to a facility in Texas.
Eduardo’s bond was then set at $10,000, according to CIRAC. His family was deprived of his income, his 2-year-old wouldn’t eat, his attorney was representing him by phone, and his family was ready to accept a bond loan from a private company that charges high fees and requires ankle monitoring. But the folks at CIRAC raised enough money to pay his bond just in time, and now he’s back home while he awaits his next immigration hearing in 2019.
Citing numbers released by the jail, CIRAC representatives say he’s just one of the 24 to 40 people annually whose arrests in Charlottesville place them directly into the “deportation pipeline.”
One law enforcement representative in the city agrees that the local community of migrants doesn’t create a threat to public safety, and is on board with ending the jail’s voluntary notifications to ICE.
Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania wrote in an August 10 letter to the jail board that its position on voluntary reporting and the media coverage surrounding it has left many community members “legitimately feeling angry, scared, and isolated.”
“In some cases, primary caretakers or breadwinners are removed and are no longer able to care for their children, who are oftentimes citizens,” wrote Platania. “I am also concerned about witnesses and victims looking at voluntary notification as a reason to be uncooperative with local law enforcement and not report crimes or participate with prosecutions because they fear the deportation of charged individuals.”
Platania noted the “significant concern” of two immigrants recently deported—one charged with DUI and the other with assault and battery—whom a judge had released on bond prior to their trials.
“They are currently considered fugitives from justice,” Platania said. “One problem presented by this scenario is that individuals who may not be guilty of the crime they have been charged with have no ability to assert their innocence and stand trial.”
Platania also said he “concurs wholeheartedly” with a July 1 letter from the jail board—signed by Superintendent Martin Kumer and board chair Diantha McKeel—in which they said undocumented immigrants don’t pose an inherent danger based solely on their citizenship status.
“If the board agrees with the letter it wrote, it may be useful to have ICE articulate with specificity how the voluntary notification policy furthers legitimate local public safety needs,” Platania said. And after examining available data on city cases, “I am unable to see the positive impact the current policy has on family stability or public safety.”
Echoing the local activists’ position, he said, “If community safety is one of our guiding principles, and it must be, it seems unwise to have a policy that perhaps unintentionally (albeit foreseeably) undermines it.”
But the man who holds the top prosecutor job in the county, Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci, continues to advocate for the jail to keep its voluntary reporting practice because he says he’s opposed to obstructing the enforcement of federal immigration practices. And so have four of the six law enforcement representatives asked to weigh in on the practice, including Nelson Commonwealth’s Attorney Daniel Rutherford and the sheriffs from Nelson, Albemarle, and Charlottesville.
“As a first-generation American whose parents are both immigrants, I realize the emotion the issue of immigration evokes in many,” wrote Tracci in his own August letter to the jail board. But he believes releasing “noncitizens” back into the community is dangerous.
Federal immigration detainers are typically only issued for ACRJ inmates with serious felony offenses, according to Tracci. The county’s commonwealth’s attorney has also noted that the jail refuses to hold undocumented inmates past their release dates for ICE, which was a practice the board decided to end in March 2017.
Tracci condemns critics he says have called him and other supporters of the policy “Nazis” and accused them of violating the Convention Against Torture.
“Demonization of law enforcement coarsens public discourse, renders sensible discussion less likely, and affronts those who strive daily to fairly enforce duly enacted law they swore an oath to protect and defend,” he says.
Some local activists have also criticized Tracci for inviting people who support the jail’s current policy to speak during the public comment session at its board meetings.
At a September 13 meeting, “almost everyone who spoke in public comment was saying these really vitriolic, bigoted, racist things about migrants and about dangers that they pose to the community, and it was completely untrue and unfounded,” says Mark Heisey, an organizer with ICE Out of Cville. “Some of it was just speculative to the point of being absurd.”
For example, Heisey says he heard one speaker tell the jail board that even though UVA student Hannah Graham was murdered in 2014 by a U.S.-born citizen, it could have been an undocumented immigrant. “That kind of logic comes from a place of hate,” he says.
ICE Out of Cville has approximately 10 core members who have been organizing under that name for about five months, but they had independently been working on their campaign to end the jail’s ICE notifications since the beginning of the year. They believe ICE is unjustly, senselessly, and needlessly tearing apart local families.
While Tracci notes that some crimes undocumented people have been charged with locally include taking indecent liberties with a child, abduction, and strangulation, Heisey says “ICE is basically destroying people’s lives over…what are considered really low-level offenses,” such as failing to pay child support, failure to appear in court, being drunk in public, or driving without a license, like in Eduardo’s case.
The ICE Out of Cville representative doesn’t shy away from talking about the reputation of the federal immigration agency—especially under the new administration—which has racked up “innumerable documented cases” of human rights and sex abuses. It operates for-profit prisons and some of the worst detention centers in the country, Heisey says.
Russell Hott, the director of enforcement and removal operations at ICE’s D.C. field office, didn’t respond to questions about whether ICE had been unfairly characterized in the media. But he said “ICE’s mission to promote public safety and national security has remained unchanged since the agency was created in 2003.”
“A lot of the folks who are undocumented in Charlottesville are fleeing situations that are life threatening, and situations that the U.S. government is often complicit in, if not directly responsible for,” counters Heisey. “And so it’s just completely inhumane and indefensible that a community that is trying to have some kind of semblance of justice would voluntarily, and with no legal obligation whatsoever, work with an organization that’s so cruel and that has no regard for people’s humanity.”
One thing the community can do to resist ICE is to notice and challenge their tactics, he says. Showing up to speak at jail board meetings, and building more community involvement and engagement is a good place to start. After all, ICE is allowed to “do what they do” because “they largely operate in the shadows,” he says.
‘An underground railroad’
Bringing the plight of the undocumented out into the open is a core part of Lana Heath de Martinez’s work. In September, the Richmond-based immigrant rights activist called Pastor Isaac Collins of Wesley Memorial Church with a special request: Would the congregation grant Maria Chavalan-Sut, a refugee seeking asylum, public sanctuary?
The public sanctuary movement provides immigrants at risk of deportation with shelter in churches and other safe spaces. Heath de Martinez, who helped another immigrant take sanctuary in a Richmond church in June, says the goal of their campaigns is to make the asylum-seekers “household names,” so that people “feel almost like they’re part of the family—somebody who they find relatable and have some sense of empathy and compassion for.”
She also knows of at least a dozen local people offering their homes as private sanctuaries. And they’re not necessarily a secret—ICE knows where some undocumented people are staying as they go through legal recourse, and some even wear ankle monitors, like Maria.
But some are kept secret. “All over the country, you have people who are hiding in part of what we might call an underground railroad,” she says.
“And you have to realize being in sanctuary can create this beloved community, and that’s really beautiful, but it’s still being incarcerated. It’s still life without parole until the administration changes.”
For now, public sanctuaries remain safe spaces. The “sensitive locations” memo from the Obama administration asks, but doesn’t require, that immigration agents not make arrests in locations such as churches, schools, and hospitals, and so far no raids have happened in these places, she says.
“It’s put in place because the optics would be bad,” says Heath de Martinez, adding thatimmigration officers very rarely have a judicial warrant, and they can’t get in without one.
But when saying it’s never happened, she tacks the word “yet” onto the end of her sentence, partially because immigration officers often make headlines for bad optics, such as when a man granted sanctuary at a church in Durham, North Carolina, for 11 months was arrested during a routine meeting at an immigration office, and 27 church members there to support him were also put in cuffs. Or when officers tear gassed migrants—and their small children—at the San Diego/Tijuana border in late November.
Says Hott from ICE’s D.C. field office, “Sanctuary policies fail to recognize federally established processes for the enforcement of immigration law. These policies provide a refuge for illegal aliens, and they do so at the expense of the safety of a community’s citizens.”
Granting sanctuary
Chavalan-Sut accepted an interview request, but because her case is pending, she can’t talk much about it. She says she’s thankful for the church and community for being so open to her staying for a while.
“Well, from the beginning, the first days weren’t very easy,” she says, while sitting on a couch in the basement of the church. Organ and trumpet music from upstairs spills into the room. “I’ve always been a hard-working person. I need to find something to occupy my time.”
As she waits for her next hearing, which hasn’t been scheduled, she’s been studying English—her fourth language—reading, talking to God, and knitting purses, for which she’s currently accepting donations. She says she’ll send the money back to her four children in Guatemala to buy them food, clothes, and school supplies.
When asked to describe ICE, she says it has “opened a wound.” Before she took sanctuary, she was afraid that representatives of the federal agency could be anywhere she went.
“I want to feel better,” she adds.
Says Pastor Collins, “The story of undocumented people in our community is one that is so easy to overlook if you’re privileged and of a certain social class, and by welcoming Maria in, we’ve not only heard her story, but countless stories from a community of people who are just like her.”
But allowing her to take sanctuary was a tough decision for the congregation of fewer than 100 people. And upon saying yes, they only knew three things.
“One is that even though we didn’t know how it would go, we felt like we had a moral obligation to say yes,” Collins says. And two, they knew it would forever transform the culture of the church. Hosting an undocumented immigrant might be out of some of the members’ comfort zones, “but we’re trying to figure out what it means to be a community where we’re called to serve others rather than be served.”
“And finally,” he says, “We knew we weren’t going to be in it alone.”
Supporters have consistently been in and out of the church for months—”people working every week on this project who would never be caught dead in a church because they’re skeptical of religion or because they’ve been burned by it in the past,” says the pastor.
He talked with his congregation about whether protecting someone who’s been ordered to leave the country should be considered illegal. And they’ve decided it shouldn’t.
“Christians have a moral obligation to speak out when the laws of the countries they’re living in are unjust or creating suffering,” Collins says. “Christians have to walk a delicate line when it comes to the way that we raise our voices because many people are not comfortable having a religious and political conversation, and yet, at the same time, from a moral standpoint, we have certain teachings that are very clear on what the laws of this country should be accomplishing.”
That includes the greater freedoms of people who are fleeing persecution, he says.
It’s the same spirit that has motivated a small group of local clergy and attorneys to travel to the U.S./Mexico border to meet the thousands of asylum-seeking men, women, and children traveling there from Honduras—the “migrant caravan” repeatedly demonized by Trump. They are joining other advocates from across the country who are heading to the border to provide humanitarian assistance, and help migrants understand their legal rights.
“When people are hurting, when people are wailing, we are called to be with them,” says the Reverend Brittany Caine-Conley, a local organizer with Congregate Charlottesville, who is joining the group at the border. “These asylum-seekers are desperate to live and we, as people of faith, should do everything in our power to assist them. To welcome the stranger is one of our greatest and most consistent religious commandments.”
Chavalan-Sut follows these stories from her sanctuary, and is paying close attention to the migrant caravan. She says those taking that journey are suffering from hunger, sickness, and extreme heat or cold. “And the only thing that’s left is just to keep going forward and to fight and to struggle to survive.”
“In order to be able to understand this, you have to put yourself in the other person’s shoes,” the Guatemalan refugee adds. “It’s not easy. You leave your country because you come to the point where there’s no other way forward.”
“[You’re] searching for another place where you can just live.”
Last Friday evening, almost 16months after white supremacists invaded our town, many of the same counterprotesters who were there on August 12, 2017, were once again gathered on Fourth Street.
It was the spot where James Alex Fields, Jr., a self-proclaimed neo-Nazi from Maumee, Ohio, had rammed his Dodge Challenger into a crowd, killing Heather Heyer and wounding dozens of others. But on December 7, the mood was triumphant, as local activists and survivors of the car attack marched down Fourth Street chanting, “Whose streets? Our streets!”
Fields, 21, had just been convicted of first-degree murder as well as nine other charges that could leave him looking at six life sentences.
Rosia Parker was one of those on Fourth Street after the verdict, and to describe the sensation, she recalled what witnesses during the trial had said about the August 12 crowd that marched down Water Street and turned onto Fourth after the Unite the Right rally had been declared an unlawful assembly.
“It was celebratory,” says Parker. “We took the feeling back. It was a sense of urgent release. It was like birth was given to justice.”
Star Peterson, whose right leg was run over twice on August 12, and who will undergo her sixth surgery for her injuries next year, was pushed down Fourth Street in her wheelchair.
“I’m always going out of my way to avoid driving anywhere near Fourth Street,” she says. “So to go there on purpose with this group of people who love me and who are rejoicing with me was healing.”
A jury of seven women and five men deliberated a little more than seven hours before finding Fields guilty on all 10 counts, including five charges of aggravated malicious wounding, three of malicious wounding, and one count of felony hit and run.
The decision came on the 10th day of the trial. Defense attorneys John Hill and former Albemarle commonwealth’s attorney Denise Lunsford did not dispute that Fields was the driver of the car, but they did argue that he rammed into the crowd out of fear he was being attacked—an argument the jury apparently believed was unsupported by witness testimony and evidence.
On December 11, they recommended Fields receive a life sentence plus 419 years.
Waiting for the verdict
Throughout the two-week trial, Peterson said she’d been studying the jurors’ faces, and she worried they’d hand down an unfavorable decision.
“Fear isn’t always logical,” she says.
And fear is an emotion she’s known all too well over the past 16 months. She mentions the last time she sat in the same courtroom as Fields, during his federal arraignment for 30 hate crimes in July. “Every time he looked around, I ducked. I was so afraid of him.”
And because she felt the same fear entering the Charlottesville Circuit courtroom on the first day of jury selection, Peterson says, “It felt good to be able to look him in the eye and give him a really dirty look as I was walking to the testifying box.”
Another victim, Bill Burke, drove from Ohio to be in Charlottesville for the trial. He’d come August 12 to support the community in the face of hate-filled ideologues massing here. This trip was “mostly for solidarity with the survivors,” he says.
Burke, one of dozens injured in the attack, was thrown aside with Heyer on top of him. He could count the compressions as she was given CPR, while someone told him to put his hand on the wound pouring blood from his head.
He’s still dealing with the brain injury. He walked with a cane for about a month, and had an injury from his left arm being crushed.
He also is getting divorced, which he attributes to the “constant anger I’ve been through since that day.”
Burke was an activist before 2017, but now, he says, “I have no fears to fight for racial equality. It showed me how much we have to do.”
As he waited for the jury to reach a verdict, he wondered why it was taking so long, especially when Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Nina Antony “laid it out so clearly.” Her case, he said, was “perfect.”
Burke was not one of the eight victims for whom Fields was convicted on the malicious and aggravated malicious wounding charges. “Nina said she didn’t want to muddy the waters with too much evidence,” he explains.
Sitting in the courtroom and seeing Fields was difficult. “It was hard not to be able to say anything to him,” says Burke. “I was told I was staring at him too intently.”
And though Courtney Commander, who was with her friend Heyer August 12, was also not a witness in this case, she felt the weight of the trial just as heavily.
The prosecution showed videos of the attack that Commander and other victims had never seen before, she says.
“It was like reliving it all over again,” she says. “My body was literally shaking. I could physically feel myself almost about to get sick.”
The bell rings
The jury rings a bell to signal that a verdict has been reached, and that happened around 4:45pm Friday. Before the jury returned to the courtroom, Judge Rick Moore warned that he wanted no audible reaction in the case in which “emotions have run high.”
Fields’ mother sat on one side of the courtroom and Heyer’s mother, Susan Bro, was on the opposite side.
As the verdicts were read, Fields was as impassive as he had been for the entire trial.
“We all just hugged and hugged and hugged,” says Peterson of the survivors and their supporters. She and Commander described feeling relief.
“It definitely felt like some weight had been lifted off of our chests, and it sent a good message to other white supremacists and Nazis…that if you come here and do things like that, you will be punished to the worst extent,” says Commander.
Outside the courthouse, Al Bowie, one of those Fields injured, said, “This is the best I’ve felt in a year and a half.”
Several stood with their arms raised and chanted, “They will not replace us,” a retort to the white polo-shirted men who marched through the University of Virginia August 11, 2017, chanting “You will not replace us” and “Jews will not replace us.”
Activists paraded through downtown Charlottesville and Market Street Park—formerly Lee Park—the scene of the rally that seared into the nation’s memory its images of hate and violence against the backdrop of a statue of a Confederate general, whose threatened removal was ostensibly the reason for the rally.
Says Parker, “My feeling is this is the start of a healing process for the Charlottesville community. We’d begun to scar without healing from the inside.”
The trial
The high-profile case, which the defense had wanted moved to another venue, began November 26, and took an unprecedented—at least in Charlottesville—three days to select a jury. The prosecution called around two dozen witnesses, including victims and police officers, and entered more than 170 exhibits.
The defense began calling witnesses December 5, including a couple who came from the Richmond area to attend the Unite the Right rally and had been with Fields shortly before his car attack. They testified that he had seemed “calm” and “normal.”
A crash expert told the jury that Fields was going 28mph down Fourth Street and a digital forensic expert said he had searched directions for Maumee, Ohio, on his phone at 1:39pm—three minutes before he drove down Fourth Street.
Before the defense rested its case December 6, it called two more witnesses—one who was with Fields minutes before he hit the accelerator on Fourth Street, and one who has become a figure in alt-right conspiracy theories that Fields was threatened by a gun-toting man before crashing into the crowd.
That would be UNC professor and anti-racist Redneck Revolt militia member Dwayne Dixon, who was here August 12 with an AR-15 on a self-appointed mission to defend then-called Justice Park, on Fourth Street between High and Jefferson streets. He testified that he’d seen a gray muscle car drive around the park three times 30 minutes to an hour before Fields plowed into the crowd.
Dixon said he thought it was a cop and yelled, “Get the fuck out of here.”
But Detective Steve Young, a rebuttal witness for the prosecution, testified that geo-location information on Fields’ phone did not show him circling Justice Park. And other defense witnesses had testified that Fields was with them walking back from McIntire Park at that time.
Attorney Janice Redinger, who served as an advisor to Dixon, says the defense calling him as a witness was “the most shocking thing to me” because they had to know Dixon had no contact with Fields, and thus couldn’t have frightened him before he charged down Fourth Street.
Says Redinger, “Nina eviscerated that argument. And if it had been Fields’ car, it would have shown he’d driven by counterprotesters three times. It would show he was casing them.”
She adds, “I was perplexed the whole time what the defense’s theme was. It made no sense.”
Prosecutor Antony encouraged the jury to find Fields guilty on all 10 counts, which would mean they believe he acted with malice, and that his actions that day were premeditated and intentional.
“It’s not about what Mr. Fields did, it’s about what his intent was when he did it,” she said during her closing.
Narrating for a final time what happened in videos that the jurors had likely memorized over the past two weeks, Antony said Fields turned onto Fourth Street, where two cars and a group of activists were in front of him, and where nothing but empty road was behind him.
In the video from Red Pump Kitchen on the north side of the mall and Fourth, Fields can be seen stopping his Dodge Challenger in the middle of the mall for a minute and six seconds, and then reversing. He could have continued backing up to turn off of Fourth and back onto Market if that’s what he truly desired, she said, but instead he stopped, idled, and then “something change[d] for him.” That’s when he raced his car forward into the crowd.
Months before August 12, Fields had posted to Instagram an eerily similar image of a car plowing into a group of protesters.
“He seizes that opportunity to make his Instagram post a reality,” said Antony.
Though the defense’s witnesses testified that Fields was “calm and normal like everybody else” minutes before he sped into the group, Antony said it was in that moment of idling that his demeanor changed: As he sat there in his car, he began to show the same “hatred” he had previously displayed in text conversations with his mom, in which she asked him to be careful at the Unite the Right rally, and to which he replied in an “ominous and sinister” text, said Antony, “We’re not the [ones] who need to be careful”—accompanied by an image of Adolf Hitler.
“There’s not an iota of evidence that supports he was so fearful he had to plow down a crowd of people,” observes Redinger. “The commonwealth used that he was calm to show he was in control of his emotions” and didn’t snap.
Antony acknowledged that Fields was immediately apologetic to the police officers who took him into custody after two brief pursuits. “I didn’t want to hurt people, but I thought they were attacking me,” he said. “Even if they were attacking me, I still feel bad for them. They’re still people.”
And when he was taken into the interrogation room at the police department, he refused to answer any questions without a lawyer, but inquired about the status of those he’d hit with his car. A detective told him there had been multiple injuries and one death, and Fields immediately began hyperventilating. He sobbed and gasped for air for more than two minutes.
At the local jail, he told the magistrate he felt a “really weird” emotion when he saw the group of joyful demonstrators. “I didn’t know what to do,” he said.
“Self-serving statements,” said Antony. And she said to the jury, “You may just not believe him.”
The prosecutor argued that Fields showed his true colors in two recorded jailhouse conversations between him and his mom months later, in which—among other things—he said he was “not doing anything wrong and then I get mobbed by a violent group of terrorists for defending my person,” and “it doesn’t fucking matter” that Heyer died. He called her mother, Susan Bro, a “communist” and “the enemy.”
This case is about more than a hateful ideology, however.
“It’s about those bodies that he left strewn on the ground,” Antony said. “It’s about Heather.”
In the defense’s closing arguments, attorney Denise Lunsford noted the “crowd mentality” of the protesters and counterprotesters attending the Unite the Right rally.
“A lot of people were behaving badly that day,” she said. “That’s just about as simple as you can put it.”
Though numerous witnesses described the band of activists that Fields sped into as happy, cheerful, and celebratory, Lunsford told the jury, “The difference between a joyful crowd and a hostile mob is in the eye of the beholder.”
She reminded jurors that young people often make poor choices, and that the car-crashing meme and Hitler image on a text were inappropriate, but “not an expression of intent and not necessarily an expression of hate.”
Lunsford asked the jury to put themselves in Fields’ shoes. He was 20 years old at the time, overwhelmed by all that happened that day, and as indicated by the directions he had just typed into his GPS, he was just trying to go home to Maumee, Ohio. She knew he was headed home because he didn’t pack any extra clothes, he’d paid his rent, and signed up for classes at community college, she said.
Earlier that day, he’d been spattered with urine and had exchanged choice words with people he calls “antifa.” And when, he alleged, a crowd of them started rushing his car, he thought he was in danger.
Fields didn’t stop at the scene of the crime because his glasses had been knocked onto his floorboard and he couldn’t see whether he’d injured anyone, according to Lunsford. Without his glasses, he also couldn’t see police chasing him, she added.
But Antony noted that, even without his glasses, he backed up in a straight line, and then effortlessly dodged cars and made turns during the brief police pursuit.
A photo taken of the front of the Challenger as Fields reverses away from the crowd he just ran over has been admitted into evidence. His face is visible. He stares intently.
“That is not the face of someone who is scared,” said Antony. “That is the face of anger, of hatred. That is the face of malice.”
The defense team was “dealt a really bad hand,” says Redinger. The theory Lunsford presented “was implausible, given the magnitude of the evidence.”
Had the defense strategy undermined the idea that he’d acted maliciously, the jury could have dropped the charges to voluntary manslaughter and unlawful wounding, says Redinger. “It’s just that there was overwhelming evidence of malice.”
On December 10, the jury heard victim impact statements, and the following day they recommended a life sentence plus 419 years for Fields.
“Some days I can’t do anything but cry or sit and stare as the grief overtakes me,” said Bro during her final statement to the jury. She said Heyer’s death was like “an explosion,” and almost everyone in her family has attended grief counseling, “as the darkness has tried to swallow us whole.”
Bro said it was difficult to read her letter through her tears. “We are survivors, but we are much sadder survivors.”
After her daughter’s murder, Bro started the Heather Heyer Foundation to offer scholarships to students active in social justice and equality. She said she’s been invited to talk about hate in a variety of settings and she’s been interviewed on similar topics by people all over the world.
But Bro told the jury, “I would give every bit of that just to hold my daughter again.”
Fields still faces 30 federal hate crime charges, for which a trial date has not been set.
The decisive guilty verdict was a watershed moment for survivors—and for the city itself.
Peterson, after celebrating on Fourth Street following the verdict, says it sent a message to Fields that, “We’ve won. We’ve had a victory today and this street isn’t just going to be about pain and fear and horror anymore. This street is going to be about victory and about honoring Heather.”
The victims
Thirty-five people were injured in the car attack, but only eight were included in the charges that went to trial, to avoid bogging the jury down with an overwhelming amount of testimony and evidence.
Fields was charged with five counts of aggravated malicious wounding and three counts of malicious wounding. The element of malice and “the intent to maim, disfigure, disable or kill” are key in charges of malicious wounding in Virginia state code. It becomes aggravated malicious wounding when the injuries cause suffering of “permanent and significant physical impairment.”
Victims of aggravated malicious wounding
Thomas Baker
Baker, a conservation biologist who said he is not an activist but felt obligated to show up that day, was a lifelong athlete. That was before he took a direct hit from Fields’ car that left him with a broken left arm and torn ligament in his wrist, a concussion, and a hip that required major surgery that included four screws. “My life has been dramatically altered,” he said.
Brian Henderson
“I tried to put my arms up and fly like Superman,” the Charlottesville native and city social services manager said, recounting the moments when the Dodge Challenger bore down on him. He thought his left arm had been broken, “because it was turned all the way around.” Later he learned his bicep had separated from the bone and a nerve was nearly severed. He also suffered four broken ribs and had no toenails on one foot. He used to be able to lift weights and do 50 standing pushups. Now he can lift 10 pounds max.
Star Peterson
Fields ran over the local activist’s right leg on his way into the crowd, and backed over it again on his way out, but Peterson told the jury that all she really felt at the time were a couple of bumps. She has one vivid memory of the entire attack, and that was seeing Heather Heyer flying through the air and thinking, “that’s what someone’s eyes look like when they’re dead.” She also knows someone pulled her out of the street and held her neck in place to avoid paralysis. And as she lay there, she remembers pleading to see someone’s face. Five surgeries later—with another scheduled for next year—Peterson has had a metal bar, three metal plates, and approximately 18 screws drilled into her leg. When she’s not using her wheelchair, she usually carries a cane.
Lisa Q
This friend of Star Peterson”s was looking for a bathroom as the celebratory group turned onto Fourth Street. “I felt like I was in a tornado,” she testified. “The next thing I was aware of I was on top of a car.” Her left arm was broken, as were both legs and all the bones to her fingers. She has metal in her hand and now can’t make a fist.
Al Bowie
After the car plunged into the crowd, Bowie rushed to help those who’d been battered and made it about two feet away from Fields’ bumper when the reverse lights came on. The car knocked the activist into a parked truck, shattering Bowie’s pelvis into six pieces. A fragment of broken pelvis slashed the femoral artery, and Bowie was bleeding out while waiting for an ambulance. On the second day in the hospital, a metal bar called an external fixator was drilled through the lower half to hold Bowie’s pelvis in place. Bowie also suffered a fractured orbital socket, a broken tailbone, three broken vertebrae, multiple lacerations, and road rash. Because the pelvis healed diagonally, Bowie’s gait is permanently affected.
Victims of malicious wounding
Aubtin Heydari His memories after the unlawful assembly was declared at then-Emancipation Park are fuzzy. While he has no memory of the car attack, he remembered something being wrong and seeing blood. He awoke in the hospital with a gash on his head and a concussion. “I couldn’t remember anything more than six or eight minutes and kept asking, ‘What happened?’” He also had a severely fractured leg.
Marcus Martin He shoved his fiancée out of the way before he was hit by Fields’ car, and subsequently was captured in the air in Ryan Kelly’s Pulitzer Prize-winning photo. His ankle and shin were broken, and took months to heal.
Alexis Morris At the time of the attack, Morris thought she heard an explosion. She lost consciousness when she was hit, and when she came to, her leg was broken. It now houses permanent rods and pins.
Several survivors of the car attack haven’t been able to return to work, says Star Peterson. She’ll be home for many more months as she awaits a sixth surgery, which could happen anytime between April and July.
“It’s very scary not having any income coming in, especially for almost 16 months now,” Peterson says. Luckily, the Heal Charlottesville fund has been assisting her and other injured victims in ways such as paying rent, utility bills, and buying groceries.
“But they don’t have the money they need to last for as long as it’s going to take for the rest of us to get our surgeries,” she adds. “I’m asking people to celebrate this court victory and to show their love and support for survivors by donating to the Heal Fund.”
Most damning evidence
Red Pump Kitchen video that shows Fields stopped on Fourth Street on the Downtown Mall for one minute and six seconds, before slowly backing up, then accelerating down Fourth.
Ryan Kelly’s more than 70 photographs of the Dodge Challenger slamming into the crowd.
The car crash memes Fields posted on Instagram that say, “You have the right to protest
but I’m late to work,” and, in particular, the private post on May 12, 2017, when he wrote, “When I see protesters blocking.”
The text Fields sent to his mother August 11, 2017, after she told him to be careful: “We’re not the [ones] who need to be careful—” with an image of Adolf Hitler attached.
Witness Michael Webster and his girlfriend Melissa Elliott, who were going to lunch and both testified there was no one near Fields while he was on the mall before he floored it down Fourth Street.
Victor Taylor woke up in the middle of the night, with “pancake-sized hives.”
Author John Grisham’s ears were “really, really itching.”
“We got in the car,” Grisham told Allergic Living magazine, “and I was so desperate I stripped down, took off all my clothes but my boxer shorts, and I had all the air blowing on me, and you could just see the welts.”
The cause of these mysterious reactions?
Red meat.
UVA physician Dr. Thomas Platts-Mills discovered alpha-gal allergy, commonly known as the “meat allergy,” in 2002. One of the more perplexing human allergies, it occurs when sufferers become sensitized to alpha-gal, a type of sugar present in red meat. Alpha-gal causes a delayed reaction—an affected person may eat meat, then break out in hives hours later, or even have trouble breathing. And because the allergy is believed to be triggered by a tick bite, you can develop it as an adult, even if you’ve been eating meat all your life. While it’s often associated with beef, other meats like pork, lamb, or goat can cause the reactions.
“People think it’s just red meat, but it’s all mammals,” Platts-Mills informed a patient at the UVA Allergy Clinic this fall, in his patrician British accent. “Anything with titties and hair.”
The patient, Greene county resident Frank Morris, had been diagnosed with alpha-gal allergy about a year ago, after a pork barbecue sandwich sent him to the emergency room with a rapidly swelling throat. “It was a really scary thing that night,” he says. “I usually don’t like to go to the doctor…but I couldn’t breathe, I was fighting for air.”
Platts-Mills and his team took him off beef and pork, and Morris says he was doing well. But he was back in the clinic that day after starting to have more allergic reactions, this time to dairy products. Recently, a few sips of a milkshake had made his lips swell up.
“You’re lucky,” Platts-Mills tells him. He says that with alpha-gal, most people don’t get the immediate mouth swelling that provides a heads-up that they are eating something potentially dangerous.
Sure enough, the allergy test confirmed Morris’ new sensitivity to milk, and pricks for beef and pork still produced tell-tale itchy red bumps. He was also tested for chicken, turkey, andfish, all of which came up negative. “You don’t even like fish,” his girlfriend Margie observed. But she was happy the couple at least knew the cause of his symptoms—before his trip to the ER, Morris had spent about six months getting various other diagnoses and medications from his primary care doctor.
That lack of awareness may be starting to change. “It seems like everyone either has it or knows someone who has it,” she says.
Discovering the allergy
Platts-Mills, the son of a barrister and a British member of Parliament, is the head of the Division of Asthma, Allergy & Immunology at UVA. His discovery began more than a decade ago, when he was asked to look into severe allergic reactions to a cancer drug, cetuximab. With a team of researchers, he found they were allergic to a particular ingredient in the drug—alpha-gal. Patients had developed antibodies to the sugar.
At the same time, reports of a similar allergy were arising in Platts-Mills’ clinic, independent of the cancer drug. Doing the cancer-drug allergy work, Platts-Mills helped to develop an allergy test (called an assay) for alpha-gal.
“I think the thing that I did, better than anything else, was to say we need to assay everybody in the clinic, anyone who would stand still,” Platts-Mills says. “We wanted to see what this related to.”
Researchers noticed that patients having alpha-gal reactions lived in the same area as a type of tick-borne disease, and wondered if the allergy might be triggered by ticks. (Platts-Mills says a technician on his team, Jake Hosen, was the first to suggest this connection.)
Pursuing that hunch paid off. The Platts-Mills team was able to find blood samples from people taken before and after tick bites, and to show the rise of antibodies to alpha-gal after they were bitten, ate meat, and had a reaction.
Then, Platts-Mills got the allergy himself.
In summer 2007, while this early research was happening, Platts-Mills recalls going fora hike, and having to remove tiny ticks, called seed ticks, from his legs afterwards. He ate meat rarely, but that November, he ate two lamb chops with two glasses of red wine.
“It was four to six hours later that I was covered in hives,” he says.
Ever the researcher, Platts-Mills tracked his alpha-gal antibody levels over time. He had his blood taken every week and watched the level fall as he avoided red meat and rise again after a different tick-bite incident followed by a meat meal. “I’ve done it a few times,” he says.
In March, 2008, Platts-Mills, along with Hosen and others, published a seminal article on the allergy for the New England Journal of Medicine. It has since been cited more than 1,000 times.
Dramatically different
Platts-Mills says alpha-gal is dramatically different from other food allergies. For one thing, unlike most allergies, alpha-gal is not species specific. “You can react to meat from a number of species,” he says, adding that some people even have reactions to eating squirrel or some other kinds of roadkill.
The delayed reaction is also not the usual allergic pattern. With a peanut allergy, Platts-Mills says, if you were exposed at a restaurant you’d know before you left. Whereas with the alpha-gal response, “you could eat a hamburger, sit for hours chatting with friends, wander out,” and still have no idea that you will have a big reaction later.
“We had a patient whose symptom was very low blood pressure, who had eaten meats all life long,” Platts-Mills says. “Just recently the symptoms started after eating meat. Three hours later, serious illness set in. You have the enigma of a person who perhaps has been eating meat for 30 or 40 years who flips into this new state.”
While the most common reaction is hives or intense itching, the allergy can also cause stomach pains, trouble breathing, and in some cases even anaphylaxis, a potentially life-threatening condition in which the body goes into shock.
Sensitivity to alpha-gal may also affect the circulatory system. An early-stage UVA study of 118 people found that those with sensitivity to alpha-gal, whether they showed allergic symptoms or not, had about 30 percent more plaque build-up in arteries than those who weren’t sensitive. The researchers also found that more of the plaques had features characteristic of unstable plaques, which are the type more likely to lead to heart attacks.
Study leader Coleen McNamara, a cardiologist who also works in UVA’s Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center, says that research calls for further clinical studies.
Putting the bite on
In our area, the alpha-gal effect seems to be primarily caused by the lone star tick, which is found on larger mammals like deer and dogs. The larvae of the lone star tick can also bite us. After feasting on our blood, mother ticks can lay 5,000 eggs, which appear as tiny specks that we call seed ticks, Platts-Mills says.
“Some people, slightly wrongly, call them chiggers,” he says. Tiny black dots you may see on your leg are most likely the larvae of the tick, he explains. They are nearly invisible.
When you get these bites, they strongly itch, which can last for a couple of weeks. If the itching reaction persists, Platts-Mills says, you may be more likely to be sensitized to meat.
“We think it is something definitely happening in response to the injected saliva of the tick, which is a complicated substance,” Platts-Mills says. “The injection into the skin causes the trouble.”
Victor Taylor, who lives in Afton, is a frequent hiker and got tick bites in the woods. He remembers one bite that didn’t heal for two weeks. “Once I removed the tick, it itched terribly,” he says. The area of the bite swelled to about the size of a quarter.
An infrequent beef eater, he had a steak a while after the initial tick bite. He awakened at 2 or 3am, and was very itchy, covered with very large hives. He had never had hives before.
“At first, I tried to take a bath to relieve the itching, but I had no idea what was causing it,” he says. The hives returned on another occasion, after he ate spaghetti with meat sauce, and then a third time after pizza with Canadian bacon on it. That’s when he realized it was a meat problem.
“I hadn’t heard anything about a tick-related allergy,” he says. “This was in 2010.” But he was treated by a nurse who had read a paper about how ticks were causing the allergy to meat and to certain cancer drugs.
In other parts of the world, Platts-Mills says, the same alpha-gal effect is happening with other ticks. He is helping a team in Minnesota to study alpha-gal outbreaks there. “It seems to be more the American dog tick in the Midwest, which is rare in Virginia,” he says.
As an aside, he adds that the tick that carries Lyme disease, often called the deer tick, actually is predominantly a mouse tick, a different species. “The bites that transmit Lyme disease generally do not itch. That species’ larvae can’t or don’t bite humans.” Researchers are “about 99 percent sure” that the tick that causes Lyme disease does not cause alpha-gal, he says.
Alpha-gal allergy and other tick-borne illnesses are a growing problem, because ticks are more prevalent in the spaces where we live. (The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that cases of tick-borne illnesses doubled between 2004 and 2016, though it does not yet recognize alpha-gal allergy among these).
This is partly due to climate change, which has vastly increased the population of lone star ticks, which thrive in warm, humid weather. The ticks have expanded their range (all the way up to Maine), and warmer winters mean they’ve been able to stay active longer.
Another factor is the overpopulation of white-tailed deer, which carry the ticks. Deer stroll through many a yard and park in Charlottesville and surrounding counties, especially as increased development has pushed houses further into deer habitat. “We’re living too closely to them,” says Platts-Mills. “This simply was not happening in 1950.”
It’s hard to believe, but Virginia’s deer population was almost non-existent in the early part of the 20th century. The Virginia Game Commission began re-introducing deer to the Blue Ridge in the late 1940s or early ’50s, after commercial hunting had nearly wiped out the population. From a statewide low of about 25,000 in 1930, the deer population grew nearly tenfold by 1970, to about 215,000, according to deer project coordinators with the Izaak Walton League, a conservation society.
Today the deer population in Virginia hovers at about a million. That’s worrying, says Platts-Mills,because it is not unusual for a single deer to have 500 mother ticks busy fattening up, and deer have no way to remove the ticks from their bodies.
Treatment, but no cure
To treat a reaction, Platts-Mills says Benadryl generally works if you’re someone who just gets hives.
While the doctor’s own reactions have been “uniformly non-frightening,” he says scientists still don’t know why some people instead have the very disturbing, severe allergic symptoms (anaphylaxis) that mean they must go to the hospital. He says patients with breathing problems or any other life-threatening symptoms need to seek immediate medical attention. Morris, who has had severe reactions, now carries an EpiPen with him at all times.
While Benadryl can treat the symptoms, scientists have yet to discover a way to eliminate the allergy itself. In some people, the allergy appears to go away on its own—years later, they have no detectable antibodies and can eat red meat again without a problem. In others, the condition seems to go on and on.
Taylor, who says he misses red meat at times, has tried “microdosing” by eating only small amounts of meat—but without success.
Cutting out red meat entirely is the only known cure, says Platts-Mills. The doctor has reached a final conclusion: “I am an adult, and I don’t need red meat, so I have stopped eating it.”
That can be a tough prescription. Morris, who was born and raised on a farm, says he used to eat either beef or pork “almost every night for dinner, or for breakfast. I’ve had to change my diet completely.” The other day, even a chicken casserole had him reaching for his EpiPen (it was made with sour cream and cheese).
At the clinic, his arm still dotted with red welts, Morris asked Platts-Mills what he always asks: “When do you think I can go back to eating meat?”
Platts-Mills answered with a question that was essentially rhetorical: When do you think you’ll be completely free of any exposure to ticks?
In Greene County, that won’t be anytime soon. So Morris’ girlfriend, pondering his test results, looked for a bright side. “Maybe salmon steaks?”
Additional reporting by Laura Longhine.
Deer control
White-tailed deer, the primary hosts for the lone star tick, are among the most adaptable mammals out there. Without predators, a deer population can grown by a third or more in a season, says Bob Duncan, biologist and executive director of the Virginia Department of Game & Inland Fisheries.
Charlottesville is taking steps toward deer population control. First, it recently allowed residents to participate in the Virginia Urban Archery Season, which allows deer hunting by bow and arrow or crossbow (with the required permit).
Second, this past winter, after much debate, the city hired Blue Ridge Wildlife and Pest Management, LLC, to take out deer in city parks. Sharpshooters were brought in.
The outcome of that effort was 125 deer culled in nine city-owned parks and properties, reports Brian Wheeler, communications director for the city. Seventy-one deer were killed in Pen Park alone. The program yielded a total of 2,850 pounds of venison, which the city donated to the Loaves & Fishes Food Pantry of Charlottesville.
The City of Charlottesville plans to continue the deer-culling initiative in 2019.
Preventing tick bites
One of the best ways to prevent a tick-borne disease is to avoid getting tick bites in the first place. Here are some tips from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:
• Use insect repellent. Make sure it has at least 20 percent deet (a repellent chemical, also marketed as Deet brand) or use those with picaridin, IR3535, oil of lemon eucalyptus, para-menthane-diol, or 2-undecanone.
• Hikers, don’t go off trail. Try to avoid brush, tall grass, or tree limbs.
• Use 0.5% permethrin insecticide on clothing and gear. (Some gear comes pretreated with permethrin, but Consumer Reports found that permethrin-treated shirts were not as effective against bites as an ordinary shirt that was sprayed with deet.)
• Shower soon after coming inside, within two hours.
• Treat pets for ticks, especially dogs. Ask a vet about the most safe, effective prevention products
If you do spot a tick on your body,remove it immediately (see tips below). Kill the tick, keep it, and bring it to your doctor if you can. Remember, alpha-gal symptoms may appear hours after a bite.
Here are the CDC’s tips for how to remove a tick safely:
• Use tweezers to grasp the tick near its head or mouth and remove it carefully.
• Do not twist as you pull the tick out. Pull it straight out of your skin. If any part of the tick is still in your skin, remove it.
• Treat the tick as if it’s contaminated; soak it in rubbing alcohol.
• Clean the bite area with an antiseptic, like alcohol or an iodine scrub, or use soap and water.
• Do not crush a tick with your bare fingers (their juices can leak).
• Check daily for ticks on humans and pets when you go outdoors, especially in the following areas: ears, hairline, underarms, groin, bellybutton, paws.
The confirmation of conservative Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court has raised fears that Roe v. Wade could be undercut or even overturned. In fact, abortion access has been under attack for decades by restrictive state laws and regulations (more than a thousand restrictions have been passed since Roe, almost a third of them between 2010 and 2016).
But Charlottesville’s Amy Hagstrom Miller is fighting back. As the lead plaintiff in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, she helped secure a crucial victory against abortion restrictions in Texas, which has since been used in at least 12 other states. Now, she’s challenging similar restrictions in Virginia. Being a plaintiff, she says, serves her broader mission: to eliminate the stigma and shame surrounding abortion. On that front, she says, “I’m a ninja.”
Hagstrom Miller is founder, president, and CEO of Whole Woman’s Health LLC, which operates seven abortion clinics in Texas, Maryland, Illinois, and Missouri as well as its newest clinic in Charlottesville. Most provide comprehensive gynecological care in addition to abortion services. Whole Woman’s Health is “committed to providing holistic care for women,” says its website, and the design of its clinics and offices make that stance clear: Walls are painted a soft lilac, clinic rooms are named for notable women (including Heather Heyer), and empowering quotes from Rosa Parks, Frida Kahlo, Eleanor Roosevelt, and other influential women are stenciled everywhere.
The Charlottesville clinic is on a quiet, tree-lined street; its waiting room has wood floors, a working fireplace, herbal tea, and purple fleece blankets. But outside, the precautions are evident—the signage is small, the parking lot is hidden behind the building, and entry is controlled by intercom.
Hagstrom Miller, 51, is tall, strongly built, and smartly dressed. She looks like the high school athletic champion she was, and like the national entrepreneur she is. Her square black glasses are stylish, her blond hair is streaked, and her lipstick is bright. Her appearance is part of her work, as she sees it, to take on and take down stereotypes. When she went to hearings in front of Texas legislators, she wore business suits and pearls to counter their preconceived ideas about “abortionists.” Now a nationally known advocate, she continues to spend time in her Charlottesville clinic working with patients and staff, making sure that both feel supported.
Midwestern roots
Amy Hagstrom grew up in Minnesota in the 1970s, ina culture she describes as “Democratic farm and labor, committed to being citizens of the community—supporting bike trails, libraries, things like that.” Her upbringing was “traditional, progressive Christian/Presbyterian.” She calls herself part of the Title IX generation, because that landmark support for girls’ athletics gave Hagstrom, the youngest of five children, an outlet her two older sisters didn’t have. Participating in sports—Nordic skiing and both competitive and synchronized swimming—enabled her to recognize her personal strength and competitive drive; both her teams were state champions.
At Macalester College in St. Paul, Hagstrom began as a religious studies major. A semester abroad in India “changed my psyche and affected my behavior,” she says. Her Indian host mother faced discrimination and disapproval, even from other women, because she was a widow. “One time she went to get her beautiful long hair trimmed,” Hagstrom recalls, “and the hairdresser cut it off in a short bob, without her consent, because the hairdresser felt my Indian mother should have shaved her head after her husband died.” Her university-educated host sister’s plan to marry for love was still viewed as unusual.
“I thought so much about the things I had taken for granted and the paths many of these Indian women were still having to forge,” Hagstrom says. Back at college, she added a major in international studies and women’s issues, doing her thesis on arranged marriage and bride-burning.
In 1989, Hagstrom went to Washington, D.C., for the nation’s first national march to support reproductive rights and counter an increasingly violent anti-abortion movement. (The New York Times tallied over 100 clinic bombings and incidents of arson; over 300 invasions; and over 400 incidents of vandalism at abortion clinics between 1978 and 1993.) After graduation, committed to taking a stand on women’s rights, Hagstrom took a job at Planned Parenthood in St. Paul.
She started as a receptionist, handling eight phone lines and the front desk; soon she was involved in every task in the clinic, as well as assisting an outside physician who performed abortions. She began to see an unintended pregnancy as a crisis point at which a woman confronts an intimately personal choice affecting not only her life but, often, the life of her family. “Abortion and other reproductive decisions are not simply medical matters,” she later wrote. “When a woman makes a decision about her pregnancy and her body, she undergoes an intense evaluation of her beliefs, identity, goals, and dreams for the future.”
She witnessed anti-abortion protesters accosting women right up to the clinic door and shouting taunts and threats at patients as well as clinic staff. “The Jesus I was taught about would be holding the hands of the women inside the clinic,” she has said. “He wouldn’t be screaming at them.”
Hagstrom’s experience at Planned Parenthood solidified her conviction that the abortion debate isn’t really about abortion. “I call abortion ‘the hole in the donut,’” she says. “What’s driving the issue is what’s around that hole”—how our society views a woman’s biological and social role and her right to make her own decisions. She sees anti-abortion activists restricting access to abortion without any concerted effort to reduce the need for it, by providing women (or men) with effective sex education, reproductive counseling, and affordable birth control. One example she cites: In 2009, a grant from billionaire Warren Buffett’s family underwrote low-cost or free IUDs in Colorado’s public health clinics, and over the next eight years the teen pregnancy rate dropped by half and the teen abortion rate by almost two-thirds.
A different approach
Hagstrom married her college boyfriend, Karl Miller, and in 1994 the couple moved to New York City. Karl started graduate work in history at NYU, and Amy got a job at an abortion clinic in the city. It was an eye-opening change.
As a counselor in St. Paul, she had often started with a non-judgmental, open question like “How did you come to be here today?” to allow the woman to acknowledge her feelings about the decision facing her. With her New York patients, the same question elicited very different answers, more like “I got here on the subway. Why?”
In New York, a place with more opportunities and more cultural and religious diversity, women saw ending an unplanned pregnancy as a serious decision, but not as a moral failure, she recalled. Her conclusion: ending the stigma about abortion—and the deliberate shaming of women facing that decision—was central to empowering women to pursue their own dreams, goals, and lives.
Soon, Hagstrom Miller moved into clinic management, the business side of abortion services (what she calls “my M.B.A. time”). Even in New York, she found, getting an abortion was too often a demeaning, impersonal, and non-supportive experience. In addition, limited public funding or health insurance coverage hit low-income and poor women—the majority of those seeking abortions—the hardest. “It was sad,” she remembers, “to see women pawning their possessions to pay for a procedure they needed.” Hagstrom Miller wanted to build her own, holistic approach to providing abortion services. When she was recruited to turn around a struggling abortion clinic in Austin, Texas, in 2003, the couple picked up stakes.
Her husband, who had finished his Ph.D., got a job at the University of Texas at Austin. And Hagstrom Miller set to work revamping the Austin clinic, drawing on her counseling and managerial experience from St. Paul and New York City. She also had the support of a group of high-powered and committed professional women working in reproductive health and social justice, who called themselves “the November Gang.” Formed in November, 1989, the group has been meeting twice a year ever since. They provided Hagstrom Miller with advice on clinic administration, staff development, and finance.
Her new company, Whole Woman’s Health, concentrated on patient service—“everything from how we answered the phones to what the waiting room looked like,” Hagstrom Miller says—and on employee support and empowerment. In the process, she tripled revenue. “I found that I could expand access, improve the quality of counseling, and justify the counseling end to the business people, while keeping our focus on that seminal moment [for the individual woman].”
Her success made Hagstrom Miller the go-to person for abortion providers looking to sell or retire. By 2004, she owned three clinics in Texas, and was actively involved with every patient, she says. Next, she bought a clinic in Maryland, where her role was more to train the manager and staff in the Whole Woman’s Health approach. In the process, she was building a national company and developing her business and employee development skills.
Building her own firm was Hagstrom Miller’s graduate education in finance. “I’ve used every form of financing there is,” she says, “because you can’t get a bank loan as a female abortion provider.” She has built her business using angel investors, seller-financing, and now foundation funding through the Whole Woman’s Health Alliance, a non-profit that owns several of her clinics while Whole Woman’s Health LLC manages them. All her clinics accept Medicaid and health insurance, and work to find funding sources so that no woman is turned away because she can’t pay.
While Hagstrom Miller has become a successful entrepreneur—on the table in her corporate office waiting room are fact sheets about abortion, a copy of House & Garden, and an issue of the Harvard Business Review—her goal is not making money: “What we are providing is the supportive experience,” she says. “I don’t care whether a woman has an abortion [or not], but whatever she decides should be provided with dignity.”
‘I had to litigate’
By 2010, the Hagstrom Miller family’s life was full: Whole Woman’s Health was running six facilities, Karl was making a name for himself as a professor and scholar of American popular music, and the couple had two sons. But at the same time, the Texas legislature was enacting significant restrictions on abortion providers. Clinics around the state were closing. “It became a matter of survival,” Hagstrom Miller says. “I had to litigate.”
Hagstrom Miller’s first lawsuit challenged a Texas law mandating that a woman seeking an abortion undergo an ultrasound first, a requirement with no medical basis. She won in district court in Austin, but lost in the Fifth District circuit court in New Orleans, and decided not to appeal. The experience did, however, open her eyes to how abortion opponents around the country were using state legislatures to undercut Roe. The mandatory ultrasound law she challenged in Texas, for example, was later passed in Virginia and several other states.
In 2013, Hagstrom Miller and pro-bono lawyers from the Center for Reproductive Rights filed Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt. It challenged Texas law H.B. 2, which required abortion clinics (the majority of which are outpatient facilities) to meet the same regulatory standards as ambulatory surgery centers. The bill’s supporters claimed this was necessary to protect women’s health, but the immediate impact was to force clinics throughout the state to close, including two owned by Whole Woman’s Health. Women were calling in desperation, trying to find a clinic that was still open. In a 2016 interview, Hagstrom Miller recalled, “One woman told us ‘I can’t travel to San Antonio, I have three children, I’m working two jobs—I’m going to tell you what’s in my medicine cabinet and what’s under my sink, can you tell me how to do my own abortion?’ We have many stories like that.”
Sean Mehl, now clinic director at Whole Woman’s Health in Charlottesville, was working at Hagstrom Miller’s clinic in Fort Worth when H.B. 2 went into effect. “Everything was up in the air,” he recalls. “When the law closed us down, we had to call patients to cancel their appointments [for abortion procedures] and we couldn’t reschedule.” When the district court ruled for Whole Woman’s Health and issued an injunction, the clinic re-opened—but no one knew for how long. “We would see as many patients as we could while we could.” Because their San Antonio clinic was attached to an ambulatory surgical center, it could stay open; “we would refer women there, even bring our Fort Worth patients in,” he says. “But Texas is a big state, we couldn’t help everyone.”
Challenging the law had its costs, however. Whole Woman’s Health had to provide the court with more than 10,000 emails and seven years’ worth of clinic documents demonstrating the law’s impact. “The sad thing was that the load of paperwork involved took the best and brightest of my staff off actually helping patients,” Hagstrom Miller says.
Trying to keep clinics open while handling litigation costs left Hagstrom Miller “hugely in debt.” And it made her a public figure, recognized wherever she went. Looking back, she says, “I didn’t know it then, but my husband believed he had to get me out of Texas.”
As an employee at a state university, Karl was also affected by the state’s increasingly conservative government. When the University of Virginia’s McIntire Department of Music recruited Karl in 2014, the family was ready to go. Hagstrom Miller liked Charlottesville’s greenery and changing seasons—“more like Minnesota”—and its university town atmosphere.
For the next two years, while Hagstrom Miller waited on the litigation process, she was living in Charlottesville. “Nobody knew me here—it was surprisingly nice,” she says. “I hadn’t realized how much [the atmosphere in Texas] had affected me. And it was really good for our family.” One day, another mother on a school field trip recognized Hagstrom Miller from the abortion rights documentary Trapped, which the local Planned Parenthood chapter had screened for a fundraiser–without realizing one of the film’s featured advocates was living nearby.
Still fighting
The Whole Woman’s Health decision finally came down on June 27, 2016. The Supreme Court ruled 5-3 that states cannot place restrictions on the delivery of abortion services that create an undue burden on women seeking an abortion. One factor in the decision: Texas’ lawyers maintained the law’s restrictions were intended to protect women’s health, but when questioned could not produce any medical studies or statistics supporting those claims.
Above Hagstrom Miller’s standing desk in her Charlottesville office is a photograph of her on the steps of the Supreme Court that day, beaming against a summer-blue sky. The first thing she did was hold a conference call with her staff and clinic managers in Texas, to tell them of the victory and let them know the clinics would stay open. “It was a very powerful thing, to see my work bear fruit,” she says.
Overturning the Texas law, however, doesn’t automatically wipe away restrictions in other states; each state’s laws have to be challenged in court. “Before, we challenged a law so we could get an injunction to stop it being implemented,” she says. “Now we have the basis to clear out laws based on a new standard.” Whole Woman’s Health has been used to support lawsuits in at least 12 states, including Virginia. Part of Hagstrom Miller’s national strategy is to open clinics in states like Virginia that are classified as “extremely hostile” to abortion rights, so she has standing to bring legal challenges.
In 2016, Hagstrom Miller bought an existing clinic in Charlottesville. Women’s rights groups here and around Virginia were excited. “Virginia women now have an additional option for quality, compassionate, affordable reproductive health care access, and a fierce advocate for women’s dignity and autonomy,” says Anna Scholl, executive director of Earlysville-based Progress Virginia, an advocacy organization promoting progressive policies. While the purchase was part of Hagstrom Miller’s legal strategy, it also allowed her to return at least part-time to clinic services. “I missed the touchstone of working with women,” she says. “And from here, we are within reach for so many underserved women. There’s only one abortion provider south and west of here, in Roanoke; only one in West Virginia; and clinics in North Carolina are closing.”
In June 2018, Whole Woman’s Health and three other abortion providers in Virginia filed a new lawsuit in federal court in Richmond, challenging a range of laws, regulations, and licensing requirements built up over the last 40 years. Tarina Keene, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia (not a party to the lawsuit), says, “Having Amy and Whole Woman’s Health in Virginia is really welcome—they are an advocate as well as a provider, and they bring clout.” The lawsuit, Falls Church Medical Center v. Oliver, is set for trial in April 2019.
There are women’s rights advocates and legal strategists who shy away from bringing challenges now that Justice Kavanaugh has been seated. Does Hagstrom Miller have concerns that the Virginia lawsuit, or the ones in Texas and Indiana that Whole Woman’s Health is part of, might provide the Court an opportunity to limit or even overturn Roe?
“Winning at the Supreme Court [with the Texas H.B. 2 challenge] was a long shot,” she points out. “What if we hadn’t brought up our case because we were worried about how [Justice] Kennedy would vote? It’s not just about winning, it’s about the chance to raise the narrative about abortion in this country. Women deserve to be treated with respect and with dignity.”
She recalls the day of the Whole Woman’s Health ruling: “I knew we had won because [Justice] Breyer was reading the decision. And then he kept on reading… and I realized how many states we could help.” And then you see the inner steel of the champion athlete, the social conscience of the Midwestern progressive Christian, the commitment of the woman who came back changed from India: “It’s always the right time,” she says, “to do the right thing.”
The state of abortion laws in Virginia
In 2006, the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization focused on reproductive rights, classified Virginia as one of 19 states “hostile” to abortion rights. The organization identifies states as “supportive/middle-ground/hostile/extremely hostile” based on an analysis of state laws and regulations. At that time, only Ohio and Alabama were classified as “extremely hostile.” By 2016, Virginia had become one of 22 “extremely hostile” states.
The following abortion restrictions are among those on the books in Virginia as of May 2018:
• Health insurance for the state’s public employees covers abortion only in cases of rape, incest, danger to the woman’s life, or fetal impairment.
• Medicaid funding for abortion is only allowed in cases of rape, incest, danger to the woman’s life, or fetal impairment.
• Health plans in the state’s Affordable Care Act health exchange can cover abortion only in cases of rape, incest, or danger to the woman’s life.
• If the woman is a minor (under age 18), her parent must consent and must be notified before the procedure is performed.
• A woman seeking an abortion must be given state-mandated information, including booklets designed to discourage abortion, at least 24 hours (or two hours if she lives more than 100 miles away) before an abortion procedure.
• The “Two-Trip Mandatory Delay Law:” A woman seeking an abortion must undergo an ultrasound at least 24 hours (two hours if she lives more than 100 miles away) before undergoing the procedure; the abortion provider is required to offer her the option to view the ultrasound image.
• Abortions, even those induced by medication, must be performed by a physician, excluding advanced practice clinicians, licensed nurse practitioners, and physician assistants (who are qualified and allowed to perform abortions in many other states).
• Second-trimester abortions must be performed in a facility that meets all the regulatory requirements of a licensed hospital. This law was enacted in 1975, when most second-trimester abortions were performed by inducing premature labor—a procedure now rarely used.
Falls Church Medical Center v. Oliver, scheduled to be heard in April 2019, challenges the last four restrictions cited above.
In addition to these barriers, as of 2014 roughly 92 percent of Virginia counties did not have a single clinic providing abortion services.
When the great classics of world literature were first being written, they were not meant for students or academics decades or centuries in the future. First and foremost, they were meant to foster a relationship between reader and writer. For Andrew Kaufman, who teaches Russian literature at the University of Virginia, that connection came to life during a prison workshop he taught in 2009, on Leo Tolstoy’s novella The Death of Ivan Ilyich.
The story, about the thoughts and emotions that overcome a man who is suddenly conscious of his imminent death, is one of the first stories taught in Russian literature classes. New students are encouraged to dissect Tolstoy’s meditations on sin, the valuing of physical and social pursuits over spiritual ones, and other Russian writers who underwent similar deathbed conversions, such as Nikolai Gogol.
What Kaufman discovered in the workshop was a new dimension to the work, sparked when he shed his “professorial persona” and simply asked the inmates, “What did reading this story mean to you?”
“I had to come to this jail…to see what I did. But I learned something from this story I can use when I get out,” Kaufman recalls one participant telling him. “It’s too late for Ivan,” another said, “but it’s not too late for us.”
In an email, Kaufman observed that “Ivan Ilyich, a careerist judge living in 1880’s Russia, couldn’t have been more removed socially, economically, and culturally from the world inhabited by the inmates at the Virginia Beach Correctional Center. Yet his story struck a powerful chord in these men, inspiring them to open up to a complete stranger about bad decisions they’ve made, people they’ve hurt, and opportunities they’ve squandered, or perhaps never had to begin with. It…encouraged others to see their world anew, to glimpse fresh possibilities for their future.”
“I came away from that experience realizing and understanding the story in a new way for myself,” says Kaufman. “I had written about it, I had studied it many times, but for me as a teacher, teaching in this unfamiliar context, it made it come alive in a whole new way.” It planted the seed for Books Behind Bars, the program he would found the following year.
No-comfort zone
The idea behind Books Behind Bars was to bring students enrolled at the University of Virginia to the Beaumont Juvenile Correctional Center to discuss the works of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, and other greats of Russian literature with incarcerated people of the same age group.
“[I thought], if going into an unfamiliar environment and leading a discussion about a story that I thought I knew can have that kind of an illuminating effect on me,” says Kaufman, “what would happen if I were to create a class in which I’d put my students into a similar environment…and then have discussion about literature outside of their comfort zone? What learning might take place for them?”
In 2016, Kaufman’s Books Behind Bars class was documented by Charlottesville-based filmmaker Chris Farina for Seats at the Table, which screens at the Virginia Film Festival on Sunday at Newcomb Hall Theatre.
In the film, metaphorical barriers between people are dismantled, even as physical ones remain. Both student and resident come to the table ready to discuss the same written work with radically different life experiences, but with a shared desire to understand each other. The literature they read together speaks to universal fears and emotions that are hardcoded into us as human beings; Tolstoy’s How Much Land Does a Man Need? challenges our need to acquire, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Matryona’s House asks how much a person can give before it becomes too much. And in analyzing it together, the walls that separate one person’s experience from another’s begin to soften, allowing student, resident, and even author to contribute to a free exchange of ideas at a level that would have previously been difficult to imagine.
Perceived notions
One of the most striking things about Farina’s documentary is the film’s refreshing tone of good faith. The viewer is dropped almost immediately into the action of UVA students entering Beaumont (which closed in 2017) for the first time, not knowing what to expect.
Maybe a university student wants to alter his perception of what makes a person “criminal.” Perhaps a resident has a specific notion of what a university course is or what sort of person thrives in it. And neither participant has much familiarity, lived or otherwise, with the time or place where these works were written. But as the film progresses, the viewer witnesses genuine emotional exchanges between three very different people—UVA student, correctional facility resident, and 19th-century Russian author.
“Part of it is bringing people together at that age,” says Farina, “and part of it is the stereotypes they have going in. They dissolve within a couple weeks, and they really open up. And particularly for the residents, it’s their one time of the week when they have a little sense of safety, but also a little sense that they can be themselves and not have to put up their guard. It means a lot to them. One [resident] literally said, ‘That’s the one time I don’t feel locked up. I can be myself.’”
Farina’s style of filmmaking allows the story to unfold with minimal prompting, but it is anything but passive. It took energy, focus, and determination to create the space where the man with the camera at the end of the table could be trusted with this level of vulnerability. Farina attended the program for two years before recording a single image, then made sure that trust did not dissipate once production began.
“I conducted a bunch of early interviews with the residents to get them to be a little more comfortable with me,” says Farina. “That relationship between me and them, I knew was going to be crucial, and so I wanted them to understand that I wasn’t sitting there with an agenda. I was sitting there, asking them the questions, and leaving it up to them as to what they want to talk about.”
“Chris did a great job with that,” says Kaufman. “Not every filmmaker would have been able to get the residents to open up like he did.”
The students who came into the class knew they were going to be filmed. But Kaufman says, “I told them, we’re not there to please the filmmaker. We’re here to do our work, and the cameras are just other students in the class.”
He adds, “There was a kind of heightened level of urgency when the cameras were there. It didn’t change anything, but I think it gave everyone, even at a subconscious level, the sense that what we’re doing is important.”
Story sharing
Farina’s approach to filmmaking is to let the subject tell his own story as much as possible, a quality that is also seen in his earlier work. West Main Street, also screening at VAFF (Saturday at Vinegar Hill Theatre), captures residents of the Charlottesville neighborhood in the late 1980s and ’90s just as they are, tying them to their location through shared memories and interwoven archival footage.
Farina’s involvement with Books Behind Bars came on the heels of another project relating to experimental education: World Peace and Other 4th Grade Achievements, a documentary he made in 2010 about Virginia educator John Hunter, who developed a game that allowed young students to address global conflict. Hunter’s game puts children in roles of global consequence-—prime minister, head of the United Nations, trade association leaders, and the like—and charges them with resolving conflicts in their own interest. In the process, they discover that collaboration is the key to success.
Despite their obvious differences, the connection between the World Peace Game and Books Behind Bars is also evident: Both programs create clear parameters and a structure for learning, then inspire the student to go places he might never have imagined. In the real world, two strangers who notice they are both reading the same book would not necessarily begin discussing their life choices and their feelings of pride and regret. But in a trusting environment where one is allowed, even encouraged, to open up, a shared story becomes a powerful thing—a springboard for conversations that might never have occurred otherwise.
“I heard this from both students of the [World Peace] game and from Books Behind Bars, it’s the ‘most important class they ever took in their life,’” says Farina. “The reality is, I’m not sure that the university students were expecting such a level of learning from the residents…and that by itself is such an important part of education—to realize that it’s by listening to others that we can learn.”
Leveling through literature
“In 2010,” says Kaufman, “one of the UVA students was asked by one of the young residents, ‘Do you guys read these same books that we’re reading here? You read these in your UVA classes?’ And the UVA student said ‘yes.’ And you could just see the glowing pride on the face of the resident who had asked that question. And that little moment…then the UVA student in turn was also very proud and very happy to have been able to share that with the resident. That moment of connection, I’ll never forget that. Because for me, in so many ways, that’s what education is about.”
Russian literature isn’t the most obvious subject matter for young people to connect around. But Kaufman says one plus is that it’s equally foreign to both groups. “The UVA students and the residents are kind of figuring this stuff out together,” he says. “Neither group is an authority on this…and that creates a sense of…honest connection.”
Discussing a modern American author may get people talking about today’s issues, but an unfamiliar author from a distant time and place focuses the conversation on universal truths.
“It is the urgency with [what] the Russians call the accursed questions: Who am I? Why am I here? How should I live?” Kaufman says. “Russian writers, they tell great stories, but they never looked at themselves as storytellers alone.”
“Ivan Ilyich is a great example,” he adds. “Tolstoy will not let you run away from that question: Why the hell are you on this earth, and what are you going to do with your short time here? He won’t let you walk away from it, no matter how much you want to. …Those are questions that students are hungry for, that residents are hungry for, and they didn’t realize that they were allowed to talk about in literature classes. But it’s very liberating for them.”
Kaufman says the opportunity to discuss life through literature is a connection that’s especially needed right now. “We do not know how to have conversations in this country with one another about anything substantive without getting at each other’s throats,” he says. “We don’t know how to talk.”
Two sides
One memorable sequence in Seats at the Table juxtaposes the two groups of students in the most human of activities: a shared meal. The UVA students enjoy a restaurant’s outdoor seating while laughing, bonding, and discussing the program and anything else they please. It’s a boisterous, noisy, joyful occasion. Cut to Beaumont: enforced silence. Absolutely no talking allowed. The scene amplifies the sense of liberation felt by residents during class, where no such restrictions exist.
It’s at this moment that the viewer may notice that the film has no score, an intentional decision made by Farina to capture the music inherent in the dialogue. “I didn’t want to inject myself in it,” he says. “I wanted to get out of the way. I wanted people to feel the emotion from what they were in the midst of, and not impose, ‘Okay, here’s the emotion you need to feel right now.’”
It’s tempting to describe the ending scenes of the film, but it’s best to see them as the journey unfolds. The residents are prohibited from contacting UVA students for five years after participating, but as the program enters its ninth year, the lasting effects are still apparent. A Washington Post piece from July 5, 2018 followed Josh Pritchett, who took the course while incarcerated, then again as an enrolled student at UVA. Other success stories, like that of Douglas Avila–who appeared on television with Kaufman, describing his journey from Beaumont to studying fine arts in college thanks to the program and the lessons learned from Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment–speak to the long-term impact of Books Behind Bars.
UVA graduate Kelsey Bowman, a double major in psychology and youth & social innovation who is seen in the film, says the experience made her more interested in social justice work, and influenced her decision to pursue a master’s in social work. “What I hope to do with that degree is some kind of rehabilitation programming or counseling…in a correctional setting,” she says. “This course…really pushed me towards that path.”
Maeve Curtin, a global development studies major, reflects that, “We need more people who are willing to recognize our shared humanity, and we just happen to use literature as a way of getting [to] that ultimate goal, for how we should be living our lives every day.”
There are real factors that cause people to make different decisions, arrive in different circumstances, and form different sets of beliefs. But so much of what divides us is little more than fog; the appearance of division that clears the moment you approach it. Russian literature is a field often seen as prohibitively complicated, due to the lengths of many of the works, the often impenetrable names, and the era-specific references, to name a few perceived obstacles. But what Seats at the Table shows us is that two people from different walks of life sitting across from one another can pierce fog as well as any classroom–by trusting their shared humanity.
Get lit
The syllabus for Books Behind Bars contains some of the greatest and most celebrated works in the history of Russian literature, with themes of redemption, finding
inner peace through suffering, and reconciling one’s physical and spiritual needs. Here are three of the works the participants read and discussed in Seats at the Table.
The Death of Ivan Ilyich
by Leo Tolstoy
As a painful illness brings death closer by the hour, Ivan Ilyich reckons with the manner in which he has lived. He struggles with why, despite a life lived according to the norms of his social class, he deserves such anguish, ultimately accepting that none of his social climbing and proper (yet unremarkable) living can help him in the face of genuine suffering and impending death. Tolstoy is best known in the West for his epic novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina, but much of his philosophy and gift for language is captured by his short stories and novellas. Here, we see his interpretation of how one can—and indeed, must—live morally, and consider his spiritual well-being, even in his everyday behavior.
How Much Land Does A Man Need?
by Leo Tolstoy
A peasant named Pahom unknowingly tempts Satan by proclaiming, “If I had plenty of land, I shouldn’t fear the Devil himself!” After acquiring some land and establishing a more comfortable life, Pahom becomes obsessed with the land itself, suspicious of perceived outside threats. Ultimately, the title’s question is answered in Pahom’s fate: A man only needs enough land to be buried in. Tolstoy’s parable contains an epic quality, yet is succinctly told, and can be read as a companion piece to The Death of Ivan Ilyich as two stories with very different tones but the same moral core.
Matryona’s House
by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
A former prisoner in a Soviet gulag—a network of forced labor camps—takes up residence on a collective farm with a woman named Matryona. She lives meagerly, even by the standards of collective farmers, and is always ready to help others and work for little or no reward. Solzhenitsyn, himself a former gulag prisoner and author of The Gulag Archipelago, depicts Matryona as one who gives of herself regardless of the ruling ideology of the current regime. She does not need to be a high-ranking church official, nor a devout communist, to live a life of service; Solzhenitsyn shows us that a person’s inherent goodness is not connected to her surroundings, status, or any other earthly considerations.
In any other year, the Republican incumbent in the 5th District would be a shoo-in. But this year, two things make the election something of a horse race: One, Congressman Tom Garrett announcedin late May that he would not seek a second term, leaving an open seat without the incumbent advantage. And two, Donald Trump was elected president in 2016. Can the 5th be flipped?
Traditionally, the midterms are the elections for which voters don’t bother showing up. (Our story on the last one was subtitled “What if you held an election and the voters didn’t care?”) But that political landscape has decidedly changed.
This year, citizens are practically frothing at the mouth to get to the polls. Democrats are predicting a blue wave powered by outrage at Trump and the recent confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Republicans are declaring that backlash to the Kavanaugh hearings and the fear that Democrats will impeach Trump will surge into a red swell.
And the polls…well, after 2016, no one’s going to call a close race based on polls.
Charlottesville is a blue dot in the solidly red swath of the 5th District, which runs from Southside on the North Carolina border to horse-farmy Fauquier County in northern Virginia. The district hasn’t elected a Dem since Tom Perriello won along with Barack Obama in 2008. Perriello served one term, and the district reverted to its rural red roots.
But in the wake of the highly controversial 2016 presidential election, a whole lot could change.
“Trump’s victory in 2016 basically imperiled a lot of Republicans in 2018,” says Kyle Kondik of Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the UVA-based newsletter that rates races across the country.
The real estate developer/reality TV star’s win inspired veteran journalist and Rappahannock resident Leslie Cockburn to enter the race. She emerged victorious from somewhat bitterly fought Democratic caucuses throughout the 5th.
And Garrett’s abrupt retirement from Congress left Republicans scrambling to find a candidate. Emerging with the nomination was Denver Riggleman, a defense intelligence contractor and distiller, who made a brief stab last year at securing the GOP’s gubernatorial nomination, which fell to longtime operative Ed Gillespie.
With two political newcomers, pundits moved the race from “likely Republican” to “leans Republican.”
Among the many opposition groups spawned by Trump’s election is Indivisible, a national organization whose Charlottesville members were enraged by Garrett’s solid support of the president’s attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act and his unwillingness to meet with Charlottesville constituents.
“We’re working hard to flip the 5th District blue because it’s important to have a congressman who cares about the people of this district,” says Indivisible’s Dave Singerman.
He’s undeterred by the Republican-heavy district. “One of the things I learned after the 2016 election is that predictions don’t matter and polls don’t matter,” says Singerman. “Getting out there and knocking on doors is what matters.”
Cockburn has an army of more than 1,500 volunteers going door to door, and the “energy is extraordinary,” he says.
“I’m not seeing that energy with Denver,” says Singerman. ”I see big signs the campaign puts up. I see a lot of little Leslie ones in people’s yards.”
Kondik rates the race “leans Republican,” and while he won’t put odds on the chances of flipping the 5th, he says, “I’d certainly rather be a Republican than a Democrat in that district.” The district, which was redrawn after the 2010 census, has been altered to be a little more Republican than when Perriello won it in ‘08, he says.
Kondik has heard of polling on the Republican side that shows “Riggleman up by a little.”
Some forecasters, such as Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight, like the Democrats’ chance in the 5th and are calling it a toss-up.
“Democrats have run some serious campaigns in this district,” says Kondik, but he notes that former Albemarle supervisor Jane Dittmar lost in 2016 by 16 points, in a state that Hillary Clinton won by 5 points.
In statewide elections, Virginia has elected Democrats since 2012. But that doesn’t hold true for the 5th, which Trump carried by 11 points in 2016. Last year, Dem Ralph Northam won the governor’s race by 9 points statewide—but lost in the 5th by 9 points to Republican Gillespie.
The U.S. Senate race pitting popular former governor and incumbent Democratic Senator Tim Kaine against Confederate flag-loving Republican Corey Stewart could be a factor in the congressional races, Kondik says.
“Stewart could lose in a landslide statewide and drag down others,”says Kondik, who predicts that Kaine will win the state by 15 points, likely carrying the 5th.
He puts the 5th No. 4 in a list of flippable Republican-held congressional districts, with Barbara Comstock No. 1 in the 10th, followed by Dave Brat in the 7th and Scott Taylor in the 2nd. In Northern Virginia, where Trump is wildly unpopular, “Comstock is in trouble.” But the other competitive districts in the state “are not as Republican as the 5th.”
Both parties have congressional committees that fund House of Representative races, and the 5th “is not a district that comes up in those conversations,” says Kondik. “Parties become aware of close races and decide to come in at the last minute.”
Cockburn announced October 17 that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had added her race to its Red to Blue list.
Female rage fueled by the #MeToo movement and the Kavanaugh Supreme Court nomination could be a factor in the race, particularly among college-educated, affluent women living in the suburbs, such as Comstock’s 10th District, says Kondick. The 5th “is not like that. It’s not an affluent, educated district as a whole.”
Melvin Adams, 5th District Republican Committee chair, thinks the Kavanaugh nomination will “absolutely” be a factor in getting out the vote—the GOP vote. “It’s not just about men,” he says. “Republican women are upset about this. They think it was a sham.”
Adams says Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, who accused Kavanaugh of assault when they were in high school, was a victim abused in the process. “She wanted privacy. She was dragged out like a little rag doll and used.”
And although Trump is not on the ballot, “He’s on the ticket,” says Adams. “That’s going to motivate a lot of people on both sides.”
As to whether the 5th will flip on Election Day in November, Adams says, “I can’t answer that until the 7th. I do believe the district by and large is more conservative than Leslie Cockburn.”
And according to Adams, “A lot of polls have taken this race out of the watch list.”
Others didn’t poll it at all. Quentin Kidd, director of Christopher Newport University’s Wason Center for Public Policy, says, “We didn’t do it because we didn’t think it would be competitive.”
Kidd notes that there hasn’t been a lot of outside money going into the race, like there has been in the 10th District. He has a hard time seeing a Dem upset. The district is drawn as very conservative, he says. “There are not enough Democrats in the 5th to overcome the numbers.”
“But in the back of my head,” he adds, “that’s what everyone was saying about Tom Perriello.”
The last Democrat to win the 5th is more optimistic. “I think [Cockburn] has a great chance to win,” says Perriello, citing her strong grassroots organization and her emphasis on issues that are important to Virginians, such as health care. “Open seats are a lot easier to pick up than those with incumbents.”
Comparing this race to his win in 2008, Perriello says, “Ten years is a century in politics.” Then, there was a lot of energy coming from the candidacy of Barack Obama and his message of hope, he says.
“There is a very different energy from ‘08,” he says. “People are appalled by the corruption they’re seeing from the top down.” There’s a motivation to check “this era of fear.”
Perriello offers a different perspective on how Republicans in the district will cast their votes this round. “I don’t think Trump would carry this district today,” he says. “I think they liked him as anoutsider.” Now, he says, “I can’t tell you how often I meet people who voted for Trump who are deeply disappointed, while he’s cutting deals to benefit his family.”
He adds, “A lot of independent voters who were intrigued by Trump feel betrayed by Trump.”
Perriello challenges the notion that Cockburn is too far left for the 5th, and says the “spectrum of right, left, and center have become impossible to decipher.” Wanting affordable health care isn’t any less popular on the right than it is on the left, maintains Perriello.
Trump, he says, is “more extreme than anyone we’ve seen in the Republican party,” and has decimated traditional Republican values, such as fiscal responsibility, with his tax cuts that have ballooned the federal deficit while benefiting the rich, not his working-class base. “He’s only consistent on issues of racial divisiveness.”
Perriello, who notes he was never ahead in the polls, offers this for the 5th: “There’s only one poll that matters, and that’s the one on Election Day.”
The Issues
They’re on opposite sides of the political spectrum, but there are a few issues upon which Democrat Leslie Cockburn and Republican Denver Riggleman agree.
Issue
Cockburn
Riggleman
Healthcare is a basic human right
yes
no
Support Atlantic Coast Pipeline
no
no
Decriminalization of pot
yes
yes
Climate change based on human activity
yes
yes*
Food stamps
yes
yes
Russian election interference
yes
yes
Press is the enemy of people
no
no
Tax cuts
no
yes
Build the wall
no
partially
Restoration of felon voting rights
yes
Not for violent crimes
Net neutrality
yes
no
Muslim countries breeding grounds for terrorists
no
yes
Raise minimum wage from $7.25/hour
yes
no
Donations from PACs
JStreet
Koch brothers
Restrict hate speech
no
no
*Doesn’t trust the recent UN report and doesn’t want to “take people’s jobs away. …I don’t want science to become a religion.”
The Candidates
Denver Riggleman
Age: 48
Resides: Afton
Occupation: Defense contractor/distiller
Grew up: Manassas
Education: B.A., University of Virginia; master’s certificate in program management, Villanova
Nickname: The Silverback
Author of: Bigfoot Exterminators Inc. The Partially Cautionary, Mostly True Tale of Monster Hunt 2006 (34 pages, self-published), The Mating Habits of Bigfoot and Why Women Want Him (we think this is a joke)
Denver Riggleman made his first, short-lived run for office last year, after butting up against the liquor industry and ABC regulations that impacted his Silverback Distillery, and Dominion’s plan to take his land in Nelson County for the controversial Atlantic Coast Pipeline.
“A lobbyist told me, ‘If you’re not at the dinner table, you’re on the menu.’” he said at an October 8 debate at Piedmont Virginia Community College.
Although his 2017 “Whiskey Rebellion” didn’t raise enough money to secure the Republican nomination for governor, Riggleman became the GOP’s 5th District standard bearer less than a week after Congressman Tom Garrett’s Memorial Day announcement that he would not seek reelection.
Riggleman comes from a modest background and said at the debate that he’d been on food stamps a couple of times. He told the Washington Post he was “a bit of a loser,” until his wife Christine became pregnant, which motivated him to join the U.S. Air Force and get a degree from UVA.
After leaving the military in 2003, Riggleman co-founded a defense contracting company, Analyst Warehouse LLC, which InDyne acquired in 2012. In 2014, he and Christine opened Silverback Distillery in Nelson County, and last year, they opened a facility in Pennsylvania because of that state’s friendlier liquor laws.
Riggleman stresses that he’s not a politician, and he endorses libertarian themes of minimal government intrusion into property rights and business. He also touts his military intelligence background.
Riggleman supports Trump, but he says he doesn’t agree with the president on everything, in particular the raised debt ceiling. “If you’re going to do economic stimulus through tax cuts, you have to make sure spending is down also,” he says.
He’s pledged to join the Freedom Caucus, the most conservative gang in the House, because he likes its fiscal policies, but he also says he differs with the group on the social issue side, and as “an independent-thinking guy” he won’t be in lockstep with it.
The biggest difference between Cockburn and him? “I believe individuals should control their lives,” he says. “My opponent believes the government should have a bigger role than I would ever agree with. That’s the fundamental difference.”
Leslie Cockburn
Age: 66
Resides: Rappahannock County
Occupation: Journalist, author
Grew up: Hillsborough, California
Education: Yale
Signature look: Scarves and/or a quilted green vest
Hollywood connection: Daughter Olivia Wilde and her fiancé Jason Sudeikis
Author of: Dangerous Liaison:
The Inside Story of the U.S.-Israeli Covert Relationship
Leslie Cockburn would not be running for Congress if Donald Trump hadn’t been elected president. After the first Women’s March, the former “60 Minutes” producer and “Frontline” correspondent switched teams from objective reporter to political candidate. Over the past 17 months of driving thousands of miles across the 5th District, she says she’s bought six new tires and replaced her brakes twice.
Cockburn came from money, and can drop names like Mick Jagger, who once dined in her Georgetown house. But she opted out of the country club lifestyle to which she was born, and documented her career as an investigative journalist in her book Looking for Trouble: One Woman, Six Wars and a Revolution. She says she has been the breadwinner in her family, and cares about equal pay.
Cockburn says she approached running for office as a reporter: by asking questions. “When you’re a journalist, an important part of the job is giving a voice to people who have no voice,” she says.
The number one issue she’s heard about from citizens of the 5th is health care, which affects people from the price of their insurance premiums to their ability to afford drugs to treatment for addiction and mental health issues.
Jobs are another issue for the district. “Southside has 2,500 open jobs,” Cockburn says. “One of the big reasons they’re open is because people can’t pass drug tests.” She wants to make community college free and turn the district into a jobs-producing solar-energy capital.
And she’s amassed more than 1,500 volunteers who are going door to door, as well as a $2.4 million war chest, raising $1.1 million the last quarter—compared to Riggleman’s $695,000—with $1 million cash on hand. In her latest filing, she claims 51,963 individual donors. “I’m not taking any corporate PAC money,” she says.
Cockburn cites her mileage across the 5th as the biggest difference between her and Riggleman, who started his campaign this summer. “I have been out [to places] in this district five times, 15 times. People recognize that’s essential for them to be represented.”
Cringe-worthy moments in the race
The Republican Party of Virginia’s ad with Cockburn’s head atop the neo-Nazi torch march at UVA, accusing her of being anti-Semitic because of her 1991 book about Israel.
The RPV’s “Leslie Cockburn hates America” ad
Cockburn’s challenging Riggleman’s military service in Afghanistan against her own creds as a journalist, followed by husband Andrew’s tweet minimizing the risks Riggleman faced.
Cockburn accusing Riggleman of campaigning with an avowed white supremacist—former Jason Kessler sidekick Isaac Smith, who distanced himself from Kessler months before the Unite the Right rally and has disavowed his association with the alt-right.
After a long night of waiting and bussing tables, cooking meals, serving drinks, and washing dishes, most restaurant staffs are usually ready to unwind. But in a town in which the sidewalks tend to roll up after 10 or 11pm, where’s a hard-working, thirsty server supposed to go?
A regular haunt for those needing a drink and some downtime is Oakhart Social, with manager and bartender Albee Pedone manning the cocktail shaker. Pedone says Oakhart is a destination because it feels like home.
“Great products get them in the door, but ultimately it comes down to the personalities that interact with you—like Norm, walking into Cheers, and everyone saying, ‘Hey Norm!’” Pedone says. “I call one of my regulars Norm because he comes here all the time.” Oakhart’s late hours don’t hurt; the restaurant was originally open till 2am every day, though it now closes at midnight on weeknights. Pedone adds that there are many components to making a place a desirable go-to venue, including the lighting and comfortable seating, but the biggest factor is the person behind the bar. “If they’re friendly and make you feel like you’re welcome, then you’ll come back.”
Pedone should know—he’s been with Oakhart since it first opened, with brief stints elsewhere before returning. And he says he’s thrilled to get the industry folks inside most nights. He says he regularly sees friends from Tavola, Orzo, Maya, Public Fish & Oyster, The Local, Parallel 38, and Lampo, who stop by after work.
“Oakhart Social and Whiskey Jar are the after work go-tos,” says Tavola bar manager Steve Yang. “We can always see friends. We can always have a good time. And we can always wind down from a long work week on the patio (weather permitting).”