Another of Donald Trump’s tweets was flagged by Twitter Tuesday after he threatened protesters with ‘serious force’ if they attempted to establish an autonomous zone outside the White House.
Twitter deemed the tweet as ‘abusive’ and included a link to its rules and policies page, titled: ‘About public-interest exceptions on Twitter.’
‘This Tweet violated the Twitter Rules about abusive behavior. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public’s interest for the Tweet to remain accessible,’ Twitter flagged on Trump’s tweet before giving users the option to unveil the text of the post.
Trump tweeted Tuesday morning: ‘There will never be an ‘Autonomous Zone’ in Washington, D.C., as long as I’m your President. If they try they will be met with serious force!’
The president’s tweet followed Monday’s raucous protests where demonstrators tried to pull down a bronze statue of former president Andrew Jackson and started to erect a black, police-free space.
Two of Trump’s tweets earlier this month were also flagged with a blue exclamation point as potentially misleading after he made a post asserting mail-in ballots would lead to higher instances of voter fraud.
Twitter flagged another one of Donald Trump’s tweets on Tuesday, claiming it breached it’s rules on ‘abusive behavior’ and warning users before they view the text of the post
President Donald Trump is voicing his fury over Monday night’s protests, declaring there will ‘never’ be an autonomous zone on Capitol Hill as long as he’s president and claiming those who try to establish such an area ‘will be met with serious force’
Protesters on Tuesday attempted to establish the area outside the North Lawn of the White House as the ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’
Police were already on site Tuesday morning at the Andrew Jackson statue in front of the White House that had been graffitied at its base with the phrase ‘Killer’ after failed attempts to topple the monument
The bronze statue was cleaned by city workers Tuesday morning after it was defaced by hundreds of protesters
City workers were seen Tuesday morning taking down the ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’ sign into a dumpster for disposal
Protesters face off with DC cops near Lafayette Square, not far from the White House, on Tuesday as Trump warned protesters who attempted to establish an ‘autonomous zone’ would be met with ‘serious force’
The president warned Tuesday morning that he is planning to sign another executive order to target protesters trying to remove statues they claim are racist.
‘They’re not taking down our monuments,’ Trump told reporters before leaving the White House. ‘I will have an executive order very shortly and all it’s going to really do is reinforce what’s already there, but in a more uniform way.’
He also announced on Twitter Tuesday that he was giving authorization ‘effective immediately’ to arrest anyone caught hurting a commemoration to an armed services member on federal land, even though the government already had that power under the 2003 Veterans Memorial Act.
‘I have authorized the Federal Government to arrest anyone who vandalizes or destroys any monument, statue or other such Federal property in the U.S. with up to 10 years in prison, per the Veteran’s Memorial Preservation Act, or such other laws that may be pertinent.
‘This action is taken effective immediately, but may also be used retroactively for destruction or vandalism already caused. There will be no exceptions!’
He later added a tweet, which Twitter flagged for breaching its rules on abuse; ‘There will never be an ‘Autonomous Zone’ in Washington, D.C., as long as I’m your President. If they try they will be met with serious force! ‘
Just hours earlier he tweeted that ‘numerous’ people were arrested following last night’s protests in Lafayette Park and threatened ’10 years in prison under the Veteran’s Memorial Preservation Act. Beware!’
He condemned the ‘disgraceful vandalism’ of the ‘magnificent’ statue of the controversial general Jackson, who Trump has touted as a personal hero, and also slammed people who defaced the exterior of St. John’s Church.
Police in Washington, DC, used pepper spray to arrest protesters who were trying to tear down the statue while building a so-called ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’ near the White House, echoing Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ). Creating such spaces is an occupation protest meant to establish a neighborhood without police.
In Seattle, CHAZ was established by George Flyod protesters on June 8 after the Seattle Police Department vacated its East Precinct building and the zone covers six blocks and a park.
Trump has been vocal about his contempt for the zone, slamming its occupants as ‘ugly Anarchists’ while urging the governor and mayor to ‘take back’ the zone.
On Monday clean up crews were seen hosing down the statue, washing away graffiti that emblazoned the phrase ‘Killer’ on the base of the monument.
Crews were also seen taking down signs declaring BHAZ – the Black House Autonomous Zone and clearing out protesters from Black Lives Matter plaza, tearing down and trashing tents and pushing straggling demonstrators out.
The statue of Andrew Jackson pictured being inspected for damage following Monday night’s protest
On Monday night in Lafayette Park in front of the White House protesters tried to topple a bronze statue of former president Andrew Jackson and began to put up planks of wood declaring the area a ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’
‘Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, Andrew Jackson’s got to go,’ protesters shouted Monday night as they threw ropes around the statue of the controversial seventh president whose figure is depicted on a horse in Lafayette Park.
As they tried to pull the statue down, DC police began to break up the crowd and clear the area, according to The Washington Post.
At least two people have been arrested for attempting to assault a police officer.
Since coming to office in January 2017, Trump aides have sought to draw comparisons between the bareknuckle Democratic president, Jackson, and Trump.
Just weeks after he took office, Trump took a trip to Jackson’s plantation, the Hermitage, in Nashville, where he paid homage to the nation’s seventh president.
‘Inspirational visit, I have to tell you. I’m a fan,’ the president said at the time.
The protesters trying to take down Jackson’s statue don’t seem convinced. Chaos ensued as hundreds of protesters were seen locking arms around the statue.
With police helicopters flying low overhead, officers used what witnesses said was pepper spray to disperse the protesters.
Local reports indicate that between 150 and 200 US Park and DC police moved to disperse the crowd of protesters, pushing them back toward H Street Northwest.
The barricade for the ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’ pictured in Lafayette Park pictured, echoing Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. Creating such spaces is an occupation protest meant to establish a neighborhood without police
‘Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, Andrew Jackson’s got to go,’ protesters shouted as they threw ropes around the statue
Protestors try to pull down the statue of U.S. President Andrew Jackson in the middle of Lafayette Park in front of the White House during racial inequality protests in Washington, DC, on Monday
Jackson, the nation’s seventh president, is considered a controversial figure in American history
Police managed to intervene and prevent protesters from removing the statue as they tied it with ropes and chains on Monday
US Park Police survey the damage after protesters attempted to tear down the statue of former President Andrew Jackson on Monday
Pictured: Protesters put their hands in the air as police clear out Lafayette Park across the street from the White House after protesters attempted to pull down the Andrew Jackson statue in the park, in Washington DC, USA, 22 June 2020
Metropolitan Police Department bicycle division officers stand with the guard after police shut down the area around Lafayette Park near the White House after protesters tried to topple the statue of Andrew Jackson in the park
Though the statue of Jackson remains in its place, protesters did manage to do damage to the wooden wheels of four replica canons at the base of the monument, according to the Post.
Lafayette Park has been the site of noteworthy clashes involving protesters and police.
On June 1, law enforcement officers on foot and horseback aggressively drove protesters away from Lafayette Park, clearing the way for President Donald Trump to do a photo op at nearby St. John’s Church.
Meanwhile, the United States Secret Service ordered members of the White House press corps to leave the grounds of the White House immediately, CNN reported. No explanation was provided.
Last month, as protesters gathered in front of the White House, Secret Service agents rushed the president and his family to an underground bunker.
Four DC police officers were reportedly injured after some of the protesters began to throw object, according to reports.
A protester pictured speaking with a Park Police officer standing guard with a line of police officers closing in on the park
Two protesters pictured embracing near the barricade in Lafayette Park late Monday night
A protester reacts to being hit with pepper spray as protesters clash with U.S. Park Police after they attempted to pull down the statue of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square near the White House on June 22, 2020 in Washington, DC
Protesters flee after clashes with police who prevented a group of demonstrators from toppling a statue of Andrew Jackson
A man pours water into a fire during demonstrations at Lafayette Square in front of the White House on Monday
A black protester dressed as Batman speaks through a megaphone in the middle of Lafayette Park in Washington, DC, on Monday
Behind the protester dressed as Batman is St. John’s Church, which Trump used for a photo opportunity on June 1, and a large ‘Black Lives Matter’ banner, as protesters gather in Lafayette Square near the White House on June 22, 2020
Pictured: Park Police keeps protesters away after they attempted to pull down the statue of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square near the White House on June 22, 2020 in Washington, DC
Protesters vandalized this car with graffiti denouncing Trump late Monday night
President Trump tweeted:’ Numerous people arrested in D.C. for the disgraceful vandalism, in Lafayette Park, of the magnificent Statue of Andrew Jackson, in addition to the exterior defacing of St. John’s Church across the street.
’10 years in prison under the Veteran’s Memorial Preservation Act. Beware!’
Since the May 25 police-involved killing of 46-year-old George Floyd in Minneapolis, protesters have been tearing down statues of historical figures from the Confederacy as well as other figures from American history who at one point owned slaves.
Just before the attempt to tear down the Jackson statue, police began clearing tents that had been put up near Black Lives Matter Plaza.
‘They were creating a potential safety hazard,’ DC Police Chief Peter Newsham said.
‘We can’t have people setting up tents on public streets.’
Protesters put up a sign reading ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’ on fencing moved by demonstrators from a construction site into the middle of I Street near Black Lives Matter Plaza
Protest medics assist a bloodied protestor as police clash with demonstrators during an attempt by protestors to pull down the statue of former President Andrew Jackson
DC police officers subdue a protester during clashes at Lafayette Park in front of the White House on Monday
Though the statue of Jackson remains in its place, protesters did manage to do damage to the wooden wheels of four replica canons at the base of the monument
A protester who was doused with pepper spray is being aided in Lafayette Square just across the street from the White House
Police officers knock a protester to the ground during clashes in Lafayette Park in Washington, DC, on Monday
Protesters confront a row of police officers at Lafayette Park in front of the White House on Monday
One of the protesters, 24-year-old Frederick Brown, said he was shot with pepper spray by a DC police supervisor as he tried to prevent officers from clearing the encampment, which numbered some eight or nine tents.
Many of the tents were used to help a local restaurant feed the protesters, who had been at the site for weeks.
‘We put the tents in the street so that cars wouldn’t be able to come through, so people could protest,’ Brown said.
‘They came up here agitating because they want this street open.’
According to Brown, who has been at the protest site for at least two weeks, an official from Mayor Muriel E. Bowser’s office came to the area just before 2pm and warned demonstrators to clear out, saying it was illegal to block the street.
But the protesters ignored the warning, prompting police to begin clearing them out.
‘We have been out here every day feeding people for free,’ Brown said.
‘We have been peaceful overall. It’s not a fight against the government. It’s not a fight against the police.
‘It’s a fight against injustice.’
Police also had to contend with protesters who created roadblocks using sections of a metal fence and construction barriers.
One person posted a sign which read: ‘BHAZ: Black House Autonomous Zone.’
The sign was an apparent attempt to mimic a similar move by protesters in Seattle who occupied a six-block ‘police-free’ autonomous zone in response to the Floyd killing.
Seattle’s mayor says the city will move to wind down the ‘occupied’ protest zone following two recent shootings, including one that left a man dead. The area is pictured on Saturday after a 19-year-old was shot dead
People walk amidst barricades in what has been named the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest zone
Meanwhile, Seattle’s mayor says the city will move to wind down the ‘occupied’ protest zone following two recent shootings, including one that left a man dead.
Nineteen-year-old rapper Lorenzo Anderson was shot and killed on Saturday inside the autonomous zone in Seattle. His killer is yet to be arrested and there are mixed reports over their motive; some say it was a personal dispute, others are calling it a right wing attack
Mayor Jenny Durkan said at a news conference Monday that officials are working with the community to bring the ‘Capitol Hill Occupied Protest’ zone to an end after two weeks.
The mayor said the violence was distracting from changes sought by thousands of peaceful protesters seeking to address racial inequity and police brutality. The area has drawn President Donald Trump’s scorn.
On Sunday night, a 17-year-old was shot in the arm at the edge of the area known as CHOP, named for the Capitol Hill neighborhood near downtown. It followed a shooting Saturday that left a 19-year-old man dead and another person critically wounded.
Nineteen-year-old rapper Lorenzo Anderson was shot and killed on Saturday inside the autonomous zone in Seattle. His killer is yet to be arrested and there are mixed reports over their motive; some say it was a personal dispute, others are calling it a right wing attack.
Protesters cordoned off the several-block area near a police station after clashes with officers following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
Seattle riot squads unleashed tear gas, pepper spray and flash-bangs on large crowds of mostly peaceful protesters, drawing condemnation from many city leaders and a federal court order temporarily banning the use of the weapons on demonstrators.
A sign on a street barricade lists some of the demands of protesters in what has been named the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest zone
A person takes a photo of the Seattle Police East Precinct building
After police largely abandoned the East Precinct building, protesters took over the area – with demonstrators painting a large ‘Black Lives Matter’ mural on the street, handing out free food, playing music and planting a community garden. Its existence incensed Trump, who criticized Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, both Democrats.
Peacefulness has prevailed during the day. On Monday, people lounged on the turf at a park, while volunteers handed out food, water and toiletries. Artists painted designs on wooden barricades, and a few candles burned in front of a sign on the police precinct listing people killed by officer.
At night, however, the atmosphere becomes more charged, with demonstrators marching and openly armed volunteer guards keeping watch. Among the demands are calls to shift funding for police to community health or other social justice causes.
Art on the street welcomes visitors inside what has been named the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest zone in Seattle
Before announcing that the area would be dismantled, Durkan said Monday that ‘two nights of shootings have clearly escalated the situation on Capitol Hill’.
Durkan’s office said in a statement: ‘We have been meeting with residents and small business owners to address their safety and disorder concerns, including the ability of first responders to access emergencies in the area. … As many community groups are also urging, (the) Mayor believes individuals can and should peacefully demonstrate, but the message cannot be lost in the violence.’
Volunteer medics inside the zone brought the victims of Saturday’s shooting to the hospital rather than wait for the police and fire departments, who were preparing to respond before entering.
For the second time in less than 48 hours, there was a shooting near the ‘CHOP’ area that has been occupied by protesters after Seattle Police pulled back from several blocks of the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood near the Police Department’s East Precinct building
Demonstrators who had marched to the West Precinct police building downtown were returning to the zone when Sunday night’s shooting occurred, police said. The 17-year-old was treated and released from the hospital and wouldn’t speak with police, the department said. Investigators urged anyone with information to come forward.
Andre Taylor, who founded of the anti-police-shooting organization Not This Time! after his brother was killed by Seattle police in 2016, said Monday that he had warned protest organizers that the city would need to retake the area because of the violence.
‘That CHOP area is attracting this kind of activity and it’s unsafe,’ Taylor said in a Facebook video. ‘I told them, ‘All those people that were supporting you guys, they’re going to start walking away from you, especially all those white people that were following you… They don’t want to be associated with any part of that violence.’
Former U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert, a Republican who previously served as sheriff in the county where Seattle is located, also called on the city to take back control.
‘Elected officials have abandoned the rule of law and their oath to protect and defend our communities,’ he wrote in an opinion piece for Washington State Wire, a website devoted to state political news. ‘They have abandoned their law-abiding citizens and have been cowardly bullied into surrendering the East Precinct – and multiple city blocks.’