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Violent Protesters fail to set up ‘autonomous zone’ outside White House

Police clashed with protesters outside the White House on Monday night as they attempted to build a “Black House Autonomous Zone,” in an apparent reference to Seattle’s “occupied” protest zone that was established earlier this month.

Hundreds of demonstrators at Lafayette Park gathered to seal off an area with barricades to mark the zone, while others attempted to topple a statue of former U.S. President Andrew Jackson before they were dispersed by police.

Protesters again vandalized the pillars of the historic St. John’s Episcopal Church, often referred to as the Church of the Presidents, with black spray-paint spelling out the letters “BHAZ”—an acronym for “Black House Autonomous Zone.”

https://twitter.com/RichieMcGinniss/status/1275224278582071296

The church, which sits across the street from Lafayette Square, was previously set on fire by what the media described as “peaceful” protesters which led to President Donald Trump walking with officials to the church on June 1 to show his support for the church. He had been criticized for holding a bible in a photograph that was taken of the moment.

Police later established a security perimeter around the rioters at St. John’s Church, according to video footage from a Daily Caller reporter at the scene.

Members of the press were ordered by the Secret Service to immediately leave the White House grounds as chaos ensued, CNN reported.

Police officers moved in to help move vandals and surrounding crowds away from the statue and disperse them out of Lafayette Square, WUSA-TV in Washington reported.

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The statue depicts Jackson, the seventh President of the United States, on a rearing horse. It remains mounted on its pedestal, however the wooden wheels of four replica canons at its base were damaged, according to The Washington Post.

By the early hours of Tuesday morning, groups of protesters began to pitch tents along a block on Washington’s H Street, according to a WTOP FM reporter at the scene. Groups of demonstrators remained on the streets chanting “defund the police,” while others could be seen sitting on barricades established on one side of H Street & Vermont near the White House.

The president condemned the vandalism against the church on Monday night, threatening lengthy prison sentences for those who target historic sites.

“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!” he wrote in a Twitter post.

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt, who was at the scene Monday night, echoed Trump’s warning on Twitter Monday night, praising law enforcement and denouncing the attempted act of desecration by “anarchists.”

“I just left Lafayette Square where another so called ‘peaceful protest’ led to destruction tonight,” he wrote. “Let me be clear: we will not bow to anarchists. Law and order will prevail, and justice will be served.”

At least two people were arrested for attempted assault on a police officer.

It comes after Seattle’s mayor said Monday that officials will move to dismantle the blocks-long span of city streets taken over two weeks ago that Trump asserted is run by “anarchists.” Two people have been murdered inside Seattle’s police-free zone.

–Wire services

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