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Fitzhugh and Fogel make first court appearances

Activist Veronica Fitzhugh and commonwealth’s attorney candidate Jeff Fogel both appeared in court this morning for their respective assault charges, accompanied by dozens of supporters.

The brief 10am hearing was over before some people could get through security and into the courtroom.

Fogel represents Fitzhugh, who was charged May 31 with assault and disorderly conduct stemming from a May 20 Downtown Mall encounter with right-winger Jason Kessler, who insists he’s not a white supremacist or white nationalist in a June 2 email to local media that threatens legal action.

Fogel was charged with assault after a confrontation with an associate of Kessler’s outside of Miller’s June 1.

Both Fitzhugh and Fogel were arrested at night with a phalanx of police officers, and Fogel’s attorney, Steve Rosenfield, protested the manner of arrest, as did Fogel when he represented Fitzhugh. Judge Bob Downer quickly shut down those arguments, saying he would not hear political statements.

The pair will be back in court June 19, when a special prosecutor could be named, as well as a new judge, according to Fogel.

He says he’s filed a complaint against the magistrate who had him arrested at 12:30am because the magistrate didn’t like the way Fogel spoke to a police sergeant. He also questions why Fitzhugh was arrested around 9pm more than a week after Kessler claimed she assaulted him, then police say he retracted that allegation on video footage from May 20.

“This is an outrage,” says Fogel. “If it can happen to me, imagine what can happen to someone who’s black, gay or trans.”

More Kessler-related court appearances are scheduled this week. Sarah Tansey, who is charged with destruction of property for allegedly snatching Kessler’s phone, and Joe Draego, who is charged with assault for allegedly retrieving Kessler’s phone from Tansey, will be in court June 8.

 

 

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Miller’s time: Candidate arrested in mall shout-down

Commonwealth’s attorney candidate Jeff Fogel was arrested in the wee hours today when five police cars came to his house following an alleged assault earlier in the evening outside Miller’s on the Downtown Mall.

That was where the latest confrontation between whites-righter Jason Kessler and Showing Up for Racial Justice took place after Kessler dined at the popular venue’s outdoor patio and was spotted by SURJers, who put out an APB for its members.

“White supremacists should not be allowed to move quietly in public spaces,” SURJ member Pam Starsia recently told C-VILLE. And the group has admonished Miller’s for serving white nationalists after Richard Spencer’s tiki-torch procession in Lee Park May 13.

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SURJ members serenade diners at Miller’s with chants like “Nazi go home.” Photo Eze Amos

Fogel says he had been to a candidate event last night and had just gotten home when a friend called and asked him to come observe things at Miller’s, where he dined with City Council candidate Nancy Carpenter. “I had a delicious hamburger and a beer,” he says.

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Jason Kessler, center, airs his grievances to police officers about SURJ members such as Joe Starsia, right. Photo Eze Amos

Kessler was surrounded by SURJ members shouting, “Nazi go home,” and “No fascists, no KKK, no Nazis in the USA,” as he filmed the event. Kessler spotted Fogel dining in front of Miller’s, and chastised him for calling Kessler a “crybaby” in April.

On video, a man with Kessler called Fogel a “communist piece of shit.”

Fogel replied, “What did you say?” and is seen reaching in with his hand toward the man on the video.

“Oh my God, this guy just assaulted my friend,” an elated Kessler says, and he urged his friend to press charges.

Fogel declined to comment on the alleged assault, but he did say he went home and had gone to bed when five police cars and officers showed up at his house at 12:30am. He says he was arrested, rather than given a summons for the misdemeanor charge, because the magistrate told him, “I didn’t like the way you talked to the sergeant.”

Fogel’s client, Veronica Fitzhugh, was arrested in a similar manner the night before with five officers coming to her home for misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct and assault and battery, stemming from a May 20 encounter with Kessler on the mall, according to Fogel. His arrest “was just like what happened to Veronica,” says Fogel.

Charlottesville police spokesman Steve Upman did not immediately respond to inquiries from C-VILLE about the show of force in making the night-time arrests, and whether any other arrests would be coming from the scene at Miller’s.

The complaint was filed by Caleb Norris, says Fogel.

It’s unclear how the arrest will impact the Democratic primary for commonwealth’s attorney, where Fogel faces Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania. Platania declined to comment on the arrest of his opponent. In an interview yesterday, Fogel noted that he’d never been arrested.

The first-hand experience of being hauled to the jailhouse was eye-opening for Fogel, who has sued city police for stop-and-frisk records and has made criminal justice reform his platform.

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Attorney Jeff Fogel experiences the other side of the legal system with his early morning arrest. Charlottesville Police

“I never realized how uncomfortable it is to sit in the back of a police car with handcuffs,” he says. “You have to sit forward and there’s no leg room in the back of a cruiser.”

He says, “I’m sure there are people treated much worse than me. I’m a 72-year-old who’s running for commonwealth’s attorney with no record.”

Miller’s did not respond to a request for comment at press time, but the Newplex’s Taylor Cairns reports Kessler was banned for life from Miller’s, and Fogel says Carpenter also was told not to come back.

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Miller’s had more going than John D’Earth’s regular Thursday gig last night. Photo Eze Amos

 

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Kumbaya moments at Lee Park—sort of

Charlottesville religious leaders staged a counterprotest this morning at Lee Park in anticipation of a gathering of Confederate supporters that didn’t happen. And when two foes met amid the hymns and prayers, all was not forgiven.

According to a press release, the Confederates were supposed to be at the park at 10am. Members of the religious community, including Methodists, Unitarians and Sojourners, met at First Methodist Church before 9am and proceeded singing into the park.

More than 70 people gathered in front of the statue of General Robert E. Lee and sang,”We Shall Overcome,” “Give Peace a Chance” and “This Little Light of Mine” for more than two hours, while calling for racial justice, love and unity.

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People of faith gathered in Lee Park to support racial justice. Staff photo

At the same time off to the side, a handful of those who favor keeping the statue of Lee, an issue that has turned the park into a flashpoint that drew white nationalists two weeks ago, were not part of the unity the organizers advocated.

Western-heritage defender Jason Kessler said he was there to support City Council candidate Kenny Jackson.

Jackson, a native Charlottesvillian and an African-American, wants to keep the Lee statue, a position for which he said he’s been called an Uncle Tom. He pointed out that most of the people wanting to remove it—and assembled for the counterprotest—were affluent whites.

“When Dr. King came here,” said Jackson, “he talked about peace and unity. He didn’t try to make white people feel guilty about the past.”

And about the group of white activists with Showing Up for Racial Justice, he said, “They make us feel like we’re stupid and need special help,” he said.

The statue, he said, “is not an issue for the black community.”

And he denounced those who have been putting up posters around town with photos of Kessler and others, calling them Nazis.

Activist Veronica Fitzhugh’s peacemaking moment was rebuffed when she asked Kessler to hug her.

Instead, Kessler accused her of posting the “Know Your Nazi” posters around town. “It’s one thing to talk about love and peace, but this woman has been putting up fliers with my name and address, saying we’re Nazis, listing our places of business and telling people to harass us,” he said.

Ten days ago, Fitzhugh, wearing a pink wig, screamed in Kessler’s face for him to “fucking go home” when he sat at a table on the Downtown Mall May 20. Today, wearing a black mantilla-like scarf, she got on her knees before him and asked, “Are you going to forgive me?”

“I want you to leave me alone,” replied Kessler.

Jackson continued to object to the posters he claimed urged people to kill Nazis.

“What I said was, ‘Nazi go home,'” said Fitzhugh.

“Let him talk,” interjected Mason Pickett, a City Council regular who has his own adversarial relationship with SURJ, two of whose members quickly were in his face as police officers approached and intervened.

“It is not against the law to yell at people,” said Fitzhugh. Among the cops standing nearby was Chief Al Thomas, but when she asked, no one answered her question about the legality of screaming at people.

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Chief Al Thomas and Major Gary Pleasants are on hand, along with about 20 other cops at Lee Park. Photo Eze Amos

Jackson mentioned a May 20 video of Fitzhugh and others shouting at Kessler. “On the video you were cursing and abusing,” said Jackson, who pointed out that was illegal and indicated he knew that from personal experience.

There were some less confrontational discussions between those holding opposing viewpoints.

Artist Aaron Fein said he came to listen to other people. “Certainly there were people with whom I found common ground I didn’t expect, and other opinions weren’t changed.”

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Jason Kessler passed on an opportunity to hold hands in public. Photo Eze Amos

When a speaker from the larger religious group asked everyone to grab the hand of a neighbor, Fein stood in a small circle with Jackson’s group, which was also holding hands. Fein held one hand extended to Kessler, who kept his own firmly in his pocket.

Kessler told some of those talking to him that he supported Jackson because he wasn’t into “white guilt.” He pointed to the spiritual adherents and said, “These people are trying to wipe white people from the face of the earth by 2050. They want to displace white people.”

Brittany Caine-Conley was one of the organizers of the event. “I’m here because I think it’s imperative people of faith organize against racism,” she said. “It’s one of the imperatives of Christianity.”

“We need to stop hate,” echoed Jackson. “We need to stop posting signs that talk about killing people.”

As many of those in the park dispersed, Chief Thomas, when asked how it went, said, “We only have one goal—that everyone stays safe and respectful.”

Correction: Aaron Fein was misidentified in the original version.

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Tactical change: Not your grandpa’s protest

In images from the civil rights movement of the 1950s and ’60s, African-Americans in their Sunday best peacefully protested, and when violence occurred, it came from police or from virulent racists.

Those are not the optics of today’s demonstrations.

Instead, protesters knock cell phones out of people’s hands, blast them with bullhorns, block filming with hands or hats and link arms to prevent passage—and that was just at the May 14 vigil in Lee Park after the Richard Spencer white nationalist crew was there the night before.

And a video circulating from May 20 shows right-wing blogger Jason Kessler with three other people sitting at a restaurant table on the Downtown Mall, surrounded by a dozen or so people shouting, “Nazis go home” and ordering them to leave.

“You don’t get to dictate who comes in or out,” said a police officer responding to the scene.

“White supremacists should not be allowed to move quietly in public spaces,” says Pam Starsia with Showing Up for Racial Justice, which has been active in confronting Confederate memorial supporters and the alt-right—although Starsia says she’s speaking only for herself, not for SURJ.

In sharp contrast to the 1920s, when members of the Ku Klux Klan met secretly in the dark wearing white hoods, yet passed by day in polite society, she says, the strategy now is to disrupt and “to loudly call out white supremacists in public spaces.”

And yet some local activists’ tactics straddle the line between free speech and criminal behavior.

“It’s very disturbing,” says Charlottesville Commonwealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman. The heated rhetoric leads “to an atmosphere of antagonism,” which leads to escalation. “We should all discourage behavior that stops short of criminal offenses.”

In his more than 30 years as a prosecutor, Chapman has seen a number of protests. The difference in the current crop is “the intensity and the physical confrontation accompanying it,” he says, as well as the participation of people from outside the community.

UVA professor and activist Jalane Schmidt explains the trajectory of protest tactics since the 1950s, when Martin Luther King Jr. organized a movement of “respectability politics” and was influenced by Gandhi and Henry David Thoreau’s nonviolent resistance.

That changed in the 1960s and ’70s with the Black Panthers, who wore military garb and “eschewed respectability politics,” she says. “The tactics always change with time.”

She says, “The 21st century descendants of the Klan are the alt-right. They should not be allowed to circulate anonymously in polite society.”

A May 24 press release from the anonymous Cville Solidarity suggested a laundry list of ways to resist white supremacy. “Refuse to employ, work with, serve or shop with Nazis. Refuse to sit next to them at a bar or restaurant. Refuse to let them sit peacefully in a public space,” it said.

“There’s a harassment and intimidation campaign being led by Joe and Pam Starsia,” Kessler says. Joe Starsia was in the video of the mall shouters, and activist Veronica Fitzhugh can be seen yelling in Kessler’s face, “Fucking go home. Get up and go home.”

Earlier that night, Kessler said he went to Champion Brewery and was refused service. “They violated my civil rights,” he says.

Can businesses deny service to those whose politics or philosophy they don’t like?

“Beliefs and philosophies are protected constitutionally against actions by government,” John Jeffries, former dean of UVA’s law school, writes in an email. “Private parties are free to act against unwelcome beliefs and philosophies, unless there is a statute against such discrimination.”

For Champion owner Hunter Smith, Kessler’s civil rights “didn’t cross my mind for a minute,” he says. “He assaulted someone who works for the business. It was a safety issue.”

Jay Taylor, the man whom Kessler punched on the mall January 22, frequents the brewery and does work there, says Smith.

However, in the face of demands that service be denied, Miller’s is taking a different tack after some white nationalists came there for beers following the tiki-torch assembly at Lee Park. Miller’s Scottie Kaylor calls for courtesy on Facebook and writes: “Our policy is simple: if any person or group, on either side of the political spectrum, displays an overt hatred or disrespect for others at Miller’s, they will be asked to leave.”

Arrests from protests are mounting. After the February 11 Lee Park rally that brought gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart to town to protest City Council’s vote to remove the Robert E. Lee statue, Kessler filed charges against Sara Tansey for snatching his phone. She was charged with destruction of property and Tansey filed an assault charge against Joe Draego, claiming he grabbed her arm when he retrieved Kessler’s phone.

At the May 14 candlelight demonstration at Lee Park, Jordan McNeish was charged with disorderly conduct for allegedly spitting on Kessler, Charles Best was charged with felony assault for hitting an officer in the head with a thrown cell phone, and Kessler was charged with disorderly conduct for refusing to leave the park and inciting with a bullhorn, say police.

“Police said I wouldn’t leave the park,” says Kessler. Protesters “wouldn’t let me leave. They were blocking me. They encircled me so that I was trapped.”

“Jason Kessler barged into a peaceful space that had been created by people of color with every intention of inciting a confrontation,” says Pam Starsia. “He was the aggressor.”

In video and photographs from the May 14 event, a young man filming is encircled by people who are asking why he was filming, blocking his camera and, he says on the video, knocking his cell phone out of his hand.

Blocking people filming is a tactic that comes from a practice called “doxxing,” says Starsia, in which leftist activists are filmed and their images are put online to “encourage harassment.”

“It’s a mob tactic used online by the left and the right,” says Kessler.

Rutherford Institute founder John Whitehead compares current protests to ’60s sit-ins, where demonstrators “didn’t stop someone from free speech,” he says.

“The more I read about it, these people don’t want free speech,” he says. “You can’t block other people’s right to move on public property. These people need to grow up and respect other people’s rights.”

Is it free speech or assault?

What’s legal and what’s not in the resistance? We checked with Commonwealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman.

Slapping away a person’s cell phone: “Unwanted touching in an angry, rude or vengeful manner can constitute assault in Virginia,” says Chapman.

Invading one’s personal space: While there’s no law against trespassing in personal space, close contact and yelling in someone’s face could be disorderly conduct, says Chapman, escalating into allegations of being jostled. See unwanted touching above.

Using a bullhorn in someone’s face: Could violate the noise ordinance, and doing it aggressively in someone’s face in a way that interferes with her free speech potentially could be disorderly conduct.

Linking arms to prevent passage: If it’s restricting someone’s freedom and not letting them go, it could be abduction, says Chapman.

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WANTED: An attorney for Kessler

 

Jason Kessler appeared in Charlottesville General District Court today for a disorderly conduct charge related to his presence in Lee Park last Sunday, when he allegedly disobeyed officers’ commands to leave the park and incited the crowd with a bullhorn. The right-wing blogger told the judge he’s having trouble finding an attorney to represent him.

“It’s been a little hard for political reasons to find one here in Charlottesville,” he said. “My friend’s been through the whole phone book.”

When he declined to comment outside the courtroom, a witness who saw Kessler’s behavior in the park stepped up.

Pam Starsia, a local attorney and organizer with Showing Up for Racial Justice, says she saw a woman of color “violently thrown to the ground in full view of Charlottesville police, one of whom told her directly that he saw Jason Kessler assault her.”

She continues, “Jason Kessler walked out of jail three hours later while one of the peaceful protesters sat in jail for nearly a full day. Jason Kessler is now being given a ridiculous disorderly conduct [charge] for his behavior on Sunday, when he should be charged with assault at a bare minimum. This is an absurd situation and shows whose side the criminal system in this community is on.”

His next hearing is scheduled for June 22.

Kessler was convicted of assault for punching Jay Taylor while collecting petition signatures in January to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from City Council. On May 8, he was given a 30-day suspended jail sentence and 50 hours of community service.

Legal expert Dave Heilberg says that should he be convicted, for purposes of sentencing on the new charge of disorderly conduct, the judge will consider Kessler’s previous record of convictions—and it’ll be a violation of his good behavior. Any new sentence could also carry the original 30 days of suspended jail time on top of it, says Heilberg.

Since this story was originally posted, local attorney Mike Hallahan offered to defend Kessler on Facebook. In 2014, Hallahan defended Randy Taylor, who is serving two life sentences for the murder of Alexis Murphy.

 

Updated May 17 at 3:50pm.

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Lee Park scene of white nationalist demonstration, counterprotest

A group led by UVA grad Richard Spencer, head of the white nationalist National Policy Institute, converged on Charlottesville Saturday and held a tiki-torch procession that evening that sparked a candlelit counter protest Sunday, along with denunciations from Mayor Mike Signer, Delegate David Toscano and the local Republican party chair.

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White nationalists gather by tiki-torch light under the statue of General Robert E. Lee. Photo PeterHedlund_@phedlund

The event thrust Charlottesville into the national spotlight again over a controversial vote by City Council to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee. And it resulted in another arrest for local blogger Jason Kessler, who was charged with disorderly conduct following the Sunday demonstration after police ordered everyone to leave Lee Park at 10pm.

The Spencer-led alt-right group, clad in white polo shirts and khakis, a response to “antifas” in black, according to Kessler on his blog, met at McGuffey Art Center and marched to Jackson Park at Court Square, passing a Festival of Cultures being held in Lee Park.

“I’m here to say no to the city of Charlottesville,” said Spencer in an NBC29 interview. “You are not going to tear down this statue and you’re not going to replace us.”

It’s not clear who organized the event and from where the attendees hailed, but many appeared to be from out of town, including Nathan Damigo, who allegedly punched a woman at a Berkeley demonstration and is the founder of white nationalist group Identity Evropa, and Atlanta attorney Sam Dickson, who has represented Spencer and who calls himself a “racial communitarian activist” on his website. Spencer did not respond to an email inquiring about the white rights gathering.

The Jackson Park event was mostly peaceful until the end, when members of Showing Up for Racial Justice and others began shouting at the white nationalists as they left Jackson Park and followed them down Jefferson Street.

At the 9pm event, which Kessler called a “funeral procession for the dead,” but which Mayor Signer compared to a KKK rally, the group chanted “we will not be replaced,” “blood and soil” and “Russia is our friend,” the latter, explains Kessler, is because “Russian people are a white people.”

Police estimated that crowd at around 100 to 150, according to the Daily Progress, while Kessler put it at over 200. The first officer to arrive found a single male yelling “leave my town” to the white supremacists, and the demonstration broke up when police ordered everyone to disperse.

“We reject this intimidation,” tweeted Signer. “We are a Welcoming City, but such intolerance is not welcome here.” Signer has since been the target of anti-Semitic trolls on Twitter.

House Minority Leader Toscano joined in on Twitter: “Outrageous protests in Charlottesville this evening by apparent white supremacists. Unacceptable!”

And Charlottesville native/gubernatorial candidate Tom Perriello tweeted, “Get your white supremacist hate out of my hometown.”

“We won, you lost, little Tommy,” replied Spencer.

“Actually, you lost,” Perriello said. “In 1865. 150 years later, you’re still not over it.”

Charlottesville GOP chair Erich Reimer was quick to denounce the alt-righters. “Whoever these people were, the intolerance and hatred they seek to promote is utterly disgusting and disturbing beyond words,” he says in a statement.

Hundreds showed up to “take back Lee Park” in a counter demonstration at 9pm Sunday organized by SURJ, Black Lives Matter and others, according to the Progress.

The statue of Lee was draped with a banner that read, “Black Lives Matter. Fuck White Supremacy,” which was later torn off the statue by a bullhorn-carrying Kessler.

Emerson Stern, who was photographed with Spencer Saturday afternoon at Jackson Park, live streamed the Sunday event, and was surrounded by people demanding to know why he was filming. He said he was assaulted by a woman, and his phone was knocked from his hands several times.

He calls the reaction to his documenting the event ironic. “I’m black and I was threatened and assaulted by white liberal demonstrators,” he says. Stern says he agrees with Spencer on the monument issue. “I believe that the Lee statue should not be removed,” he says.

Stern has footage of counter protesters locking arms and blocking Kessler, while shouting, “Black lives matter.”

After police announced the park closed at 10pm and participants were leaving, Kessler, 33, was arrested for not obeying officers’ commands to leave and for inciting others with his bullhorn, as was Charles William Best, 21, for assaulting law enforcement, a felony, and Jordan McNeish, 28, for disorderly conduct for spitting on Kessler, according to police.

On Monday, Perriello held a press conference at Lee Park, where at least a dozen police officers were stationed around the park. He called for a state commission on racial healing and transformation, and the elimination of the Lee-Jackson state holiday as “something that’s dividing us.” Said Perriello, “We believe these are the last gasps of a dying racist ideology.”

MORE PHOTOS FROM SUNDAY’S COUNTERPROTEST:

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Emerson Stern live streamed the Sunday event, and had his phone knocked out of his hand several times. Photo Eze Amos
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Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy, left, who called for the removal of the Robert E. Lee statue last year, says he’s been threatened with lynching and his family has been harassed. Photo Eze Amos
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Counter demonstration by candlelight at Lee Park Sunday night. Photo Eze Amos
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Jason Kessler before he ripped the “Black Lives Matter” banner off the Lee statue. Photo Eze Amos
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Jason Kessler was one of three people arrested Sunday night. Photo Eze Amos
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Don Gathers, who chaired the city’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Race, Memorials and Public Spaces, speaks up at the Lee Park counter demonstration. Photo Eze Amos

Updated Monday, May 15 at 12:09pm.

Updated Monday, May 15 at 5pm.

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Kessler makes back-to-back court appearances

Blogger and antifa resister Jason Kessler’s weekend was bookended by dates in the Charlottesville General District Court, one in which he claims he’s the victim, another in which he was sentenced for assault.

On Friday, May 5, a special prosecutor was named and a court date set to hear Kessler’s charge against Sara Tansey for grabbing his phone at a Corey Stewart rally February 11 in Lee Park. At that same event, Tansey alleges Joe Draego, the man who sued Charlottesville after he was dragged out of City Council for calling Muslims “monstrous maniacs,” assaulted her when he retrieved Kessler’s phone.

At an April 17 hearing, Kessler complained to the judge that Tansey should have been charged with felony larceny rather than destruction of property, a Class 3 misdemeanor, according to her attorney, Jeff Fogel. He also demanded a special prosecutor, but voiced dissatisfaction with Mike Doucette, the Lynchburg commonwealth’s attorney brought in as a special prosecutor for Kessler’s petition to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from office. Doucette determined in March Kessler did not have enough signatures and he declined to proceed with the petition.

Fluvanna Commonwealth’s Attorney Jeff Haislip will hear the Tansey and Draego cases June 8.

Kessler’s sentencing for slugging a man was originally scheduled for April 27, but was continued because he was out of town. According to his Twitter account, Kessler was in Berkeley “resisting terrorist Antifa threats” to Ann Coulter, whose visit to the university there was canceled.

He previously pleaded guilty April 6 to punching Jay Taylor while collecting petition signatures January 22. Kessler also filed assault charges against Taylor, but the prosecutor threw those out March 3 with prejudice because video surveillance footage did not support Kessler’s story.

In court Monday, Kessler was sentenced to a 30-day suspended jail sentence, 50 hours of community service and told to have no “violent contact” with Taylor.

After the hearing, Taylor said, “I don’t think jail is appropriate. I hold no ill will toward Mr. Kessler. We worked together. I considered him a friend. I wish he’d spend as much energy building our community up rather than tearing it down.”

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Still angry: Kessler pleads guilty to assault charge

Jason Kessler, the right-wing blogger who unsuccessfully petitioned to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from office, pleaded guilty today to punching a man while gathering petition signatures, but challenged the victim’s statements outside the Charlottesville General District Court.

In the same court March 3, the prosecution asked the judge to dismiss with prejudice an assault complaint Kessler filed against Jay Taylor, the man he socked, because video footage from a nearby surveillance camera did not support Kessler’s account.

At today’s hearing, Kessler entered a guilty plea and will be sentenced April 27. Outside the courthouse, he initially responded to a request for comment by giving this reporter the finger, but then came back twice to make statements as the media interviewed Taylor.

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Jason Kessler with his attorney, Buddy Weber, after he pleaded guilty to assault and before he flipped off a C-VILLE reporter. Staff photo

The two were acquainted from working on an indie film project a few years ago, says Taylor, and when he ran into Kessler on the Downtown Mall January 22, “I took the opportunity to engage him.” Taylor says he read the petition to remove Bellamy from office, and took issue with the aggressive way Kessler was going after Bellamy.

“I said, ‘You’re being kind of an asshole,'” says Taylor. “He just kind of hauled off and hit me.”

Kessler claimed in his tossed-out complaint that Taylor assaulted him, and he had punched him in self-defense.

“I was literally holding a cup of coffee,” says Taylor, killing time with his dog on the mall. “He handed me the clipboard to read.” And Taylor says before he could ask Kessler why he was targeting Bellamy and trying to ruin him, Kessler clocked him, busting his lip on the inside.

“I do care about how people comport themselves,” says Taylor. “It’s important to do so in a civil manner.”

He says he objects to Kessler’s tactics that use “fear and hate.” And he describes Kessler as “interested in tearing things down and making havoc.”

Says Taylor, “We need to be able to calmly and civilly—and I stress civilly—talk together. If I don’t like what you say, you just can’t hit me.”

About that time, Kessler returned to the front of the courthouse. He repeated his claims that he had been angry and afraid during the confrontation. He accused Taylor’s friend of tearing up his petition the day of the punching. He also said he apologized to Taylor, whom he called “a coward.”

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Jason Kessler has a change of heart about talking to the media. Staff photo

“After having witnessed that,” says Taylor after Kessler left, “I think he is seeking attention. The facts he just stated didn’t happen.” Kessler did apologize to him after the assault and said he’d make it right, Taylor confirms. 

Taylor says he didn’t know the other man who was present and wrote “void” on Kessler’s petition, and that the video footage would vindicate his account.

And when the police arrived, Kessler “practically knocked me aside to get to the police first,” says Taylor.

He says he’s going to start a GoFundMe account to help with the legal fees he incurred from the debunked assault charge Kessler filed against him. And he says he wants to start a civility campaign.

About that time, Kessler returned again and denounced reporters interviewing Taylor. “When you talk to Jay Taylor for 20 minutes and are laughing, I’m sure it’s going to be reported fairly,” he says.

The Newsplex’s Talya Cunningham, whom Kessler has berated online for not using interview footage that “didn’t fit their agenda” and for seeking comment from Showing Up for Racial Justice, a group that opposes Kessler and has called him a “white nationalist,” pulled out her camera and asked him what he wanted to say, and WINA’s Dori Zook put a microphone before Kessler.

“You can’t believe anything the liberal media says,” he declares. “You can’t believe anything Jay Taylor says.”

Kessler maintains he felt threatened by Taylor and the other man, and was angry and afraid when he struck Taylor. “It was a gang thing,” he says.

He alleges Taylor came up and “was screaming in my face.” And he recounted the travails he’s encountered with people swearing at him, harassing him and stealing his phone.

Says Kessler, “I was just having a bad day.”

As Kessler continued to reiterate that he was threatened and angry, Cunningham packed up her camera.

And when asked about the bogus assault charge he filed against Taylor, Kessler glared, said nothing and walked away.

 

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Out loud: Protesters and counterprotesters keep volume up at Garrett town hall

This is what democracy looked like March 31 outside UVA’s Garrett Hall, the scene of Congressman Tom Garrett’s first town hall: rowdy.

Demonstrators armed with bullhorns both for and against Garrett pushed up against one another and made their positions known with shouts of “USA! USA! USA!” and “Hey, hey, ho ho, white supremacy’s got to go.”

While the pro-Garrett faction, many of which were carrying Garrett or Trump campaign signs, was outnumbered, they did manage to keep the volume up, and even inside Garrett Hall, chants could be heard for the first hour of the forum.

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photo Eze Amos

Groups like Indivisible Charlottesville have called on Garrett to hold a town hall since he took office in January, and many were not pleased that his first meeting in the blue-hued center of the mostly red 5th District was limited to 230 people—50 Batten students and 180 chosen by lottery out of the 850 who signed up, according to Batten Dean Allan Stam, who led the discussion.

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Virginia State Police joined UVA police officers at the town hall. Around 60 officers were on hand. Photo Eze Amos

Dozens of police officers were stationed outside Garrett Hall to keep the peace, and despite heated exchanges between the factions, primarily Showing Up for Racial Justice and western heritage defender Jason Kessler’s Unity and Security for America, no arrests were made, according to university police.

Kessler, who recently was thwarted in court on his petition drive to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from office, filmed a video in front of Garrett Hall detailing his equipment for the event, which included a sign with Pepe the Frog, a symbol appropriated by white nationalists, bearing the message, “Kekistani American Day,” and a shield to fend off the “antifas”—anti-fascists in alt-right lingo.

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photo Eze Amos

And the shields were used to push back on banner-carrying SURJ members in front of Garrett Hall. Among the dozen or so activist groups that have sprung up since the 2016 election, SURJ has emerged as the most militant. Its members surrounded and shouted down GOP gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart February 11 when he was in town to denounce City Council’s vote to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee.

At the town hall, this time Stewart was equipped with his own bullhorn to broadcast his promise to protect his supporters’ culture, heritage and history.

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GOP gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart was back in Charlottesville again. Photo Eze Amos

“The strange part was outside the building, having to go through that gauntlet,” says town hall attendee Diana Mead. “It made me a little nervous.”

Also on Kessler’s video, Albemarle County Republican Committee’s new chair, George Urban, shares a tip that a “group of anarchists partially funded by George Soros were boarding a bus in Richmond headed for this event to cause trouble.” Urban declined to comment on “protesters’ organizing efforts” when contacted by C-VILLE.

University Democrats, whose offer of a larger space to hold the town hall did not receive a response from Garrett, held a non-partisan democracy festival in the amphitheater across from the town hall. That event was relatively calm in comparison, says communications coordinator Virginia Chambers. She said between 18 and 20 groups set up tables, and she estimates 600 attended.

Despite the rain, says Chambers, “People were walking around and engaging with people at the tables.”

A March 1 release from Garrett’s office said Batten’s rules for the town hall prohibited signs, cheering, clapping, booing and chanting; several of these were broken immediately.

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Breakin’ the rules. Photo Eze Amos

A handful of SURJers made it into the front row of the town hall, where they unfurled a banner that read, “No dialogue with white supremacy.” They chanted “white supremacy has got to go” as they headed out of the room on their own volition.

“It didn’t bother me,” says Mead, “because they were so efficient. They got their message out and didn’t have to be dragged out. It was pretty classic civil disobedience—except they didn’t want to go to jail.”

In a statement, SURJ said, “Engaging in polite conversation with Garrett normalizes his extreme views and allows them to spread. Instead, we need to disrupt this language…”

Garrett acknowledged the chants outside and in. “There’s no place for white supremacy in the forum of Thomas Jefferson’s university or in the nation of the United States of America,” he said.

During the two-hour forum, Garrett responded to questions submitted by attendees and randomly chosen by the Batten School on health care, President Trump, Russian influence, immigration and guns in the District of Columbia.

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Congressman Tom Garrett said his concern for safety was the reason for holding the town hall in a smaller venue. Eze Amos

At times his responses seemed to draw bipartisan applause, such as when he said he would support the removal from office of any officials determined to collude with Russia, or when he said he did not believe all refugees should be banned from entering the U.S.

His detailed and rapid-fire responses to some questions caused Stam to remark, “I think you’re turning out to be a little more wonkish than people expected.”

Garrett promised to hold more town halls in the future, and has one scheduled May 9 in Moneta.

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Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy Dean Allan Stam led the discussion with Congressman Tom Garrett. Photo Eze Amos

He concluded with thanks to the Batten School and to the attendees. “Whether you think I’m the best congressman or the worst ever, thanks for caring enough to come out,” he said. “This is what drives the greatest nation on earth.”

Categories
News

In Brief: Members only, additional candidates emerge and more

More candidates emerge

Charlottesville School Board member Amy Laufer announced a run for City Council February 27, and former Albemarle School Board chair Ned Gallaway wants the Democratic nomination for Albemarle’s Rio seat. BOS Chair Diantha McKeel seeks a second term representing the Jack Jouett District. And Angela Lynn again will challenge Weyers Cave Delegate Steve Landes for the 25th District seat.

Kitchen tragedy

Local chef Allie Redshaw was involved in a tragic accident the morning of March 1 when her right hand was caught in a meat grinder at Lampo Neapolitan Pizzeria. She was rushed to the UVA Medical Center, where her hand was amputated at the wrist. At press time, more than $100,000 had been raised for her and her family via a GoFundMe campaign.

“America isn’t a democracy.”

—U.S. Representative Tom Garrett on Twitter responding to complaints about his March 31 town hall lottery.

With prejudice

A charge against James Justin Taylor for allegedly assaulting white heritage defender Jason Kessler was dismissed March 3 at the prosecution’s request because video footage did not support Kessler’s complaint. Kessler, who has filed a petition to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from City Council, faces an assault charge April 6.

Membership has its privileges

The Derek Sieg/Josh Rogers/Ben Pfinsgraff private social club targeting the creative community nearly collapsed—literally—when the former Mentor Lodge roof caved in a year ago. Common House is back on track and  plans to open this spring. For a $600 initiation fee and $150/month dues (couples get a price break), members have their own brass keys for a home away from home that includes coffee, cocktails and Chickapig.


The current size of the Main Street Arena is 20,211 square feet. The size of the tech incubator to be built in its place will be 100,000 square feet.
The current size of the Main Street Arena is 20,211 square feet. The size of the tech incubator to be built in its place will be 100,000 square feet. Staff photo

An icy farewell

The sale of Mark Brown’s Main Street Arena to Jaffray Woodriff’s Taliaferro Junction LLC, which plans to build a technology incubator with retail in its place, means big changes for the Downtown Mall—and to all the people who like to strap on ice skates. Skating will continue at the ice park through the fall, and then something will need to freeze fast or local hockey teams and figure skaters will be left on thin ice (the new owner says it’ll donate equipment to a business venture that wants to open an ice rink in a new location). Construction on the incubator is planned for spring 2018.

PROPERTY HISTORY

Built: 1996
Brown paid $3 million in 2010
Woodriff paid $5.7 million in 2017


What does 100K square feet look like?

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As a comparison to the size of the incoming tech incubator, a football field is 57,600 square feet, the White House is 67,000 square feet, and the Kennedy Center is 180,000 square feet.


But wait, there’s more

Last week we wrote about 10 groups that have sprung up since the election, only to learn we omitted Progressive Democrats of America—Central Virginia Chapter.

Inspired by: The 2004 election results, with a mission to transform the Democratic Party. Local chapter formed after 2016 election.

Issues: Health care, climate change, SuperPACs, voter access and election integrity, social and economic justice

Strategy: Grassroots PAC operating inside the Democratic Party and outside in movements for peace and justice. Participates in letter drops to legislators, rallies and supporting democratic progressive candidates.

Event: Sponsored documentary GerryRIGGED, airing at 6:30pm March 22 on WCVE

Supporters: 36 at the group’s first public meeting January 4; 90 on e-mail list

Info: facebook.com/groups/198937913888031/