//Attorney General Barr ordered authorities to clear protesters near White House, DOJ official says

Attorney General Barr ordered authorities to clear protesters near White House, DOJ official says

that have peaceful protesters pushed aside by tear gas And what to me, you know, seem to be pretty Uh ah. Heavy handed, sweeping of the street so that the president could make a photo op eyes something that all of us should be concerned about. We have a president who was a reality television star. But the church is not a reality television than set. And the Bible is not a problem. Asi was standing there holding the Bible. I thought to myself that he should try reading it where it says do justice, love, mercy. And while humbly with your God, we have seen in this president neither a commitment to justice making where criminal justice is reform is concerned or any other justice issue. We have not seen mercy. Certainly that would not demonstrated, uh, or given to the protesters, Uh, or to those who are sick in our country suffering from a deadly airborne virus. And as we watched him make his way to a kind of triumphant march to the church, Uh ah, I saw no humility. This is something that is deeply offensive to me as a person of faith.

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Attorney General Barr ordered authorities to clear protesters near White House, DOJ official says

Attorney General William Barr on Monday evening ordered authorities to clear a crowd of protesters that had gathered near the White House, according to a Justice Department official, minutes ahead of President Donald Trump’s televised address from the Rose Garden.Barr and other top officials from agencies responsible for securing the White House had previously planned to secure a wider perimeter around Lafayette Square, a federally owned green space just north of the building, in response to fires and destruction caused by protestors on Sunday night.That plan, developed earlier Monday, would have cleared the area later used for the president’s walk to the nearby St. John’s Episcopal Church for a photo-op by 4 p.m. ET, the official said.But it never happened. When Barr arrived at Lafayette Square just after 6 p.m. in a scene that was captured on news cameras and elicited heckles from the large, peaceful crowd, the attorney general saw that the area had not been emptied, and told police to clear the area, the official said.If federal law enforcement was met with resistance by the protesters, crowd control measures should be implemented, Barr had said, according to the official.The Washington Post first reported Barr’s direct involvement.Barr had been told that police believed protestors were gathering rocks to throw at law enforcement, and while he was in the park, water bottles were thrown in his direction, the official said. CNN did not witness any water bottles being thrown at the attorney general. Camera footage shows him standing and watching the crowd for several minutes, flanked by a security detail and two senior department officials.Just before 6:24 p.m., police broadcast their first warning for the crowd to distance. A CNN correspondent reporting from the rooftop of a nearby hotel heard three warnings broadcast over the next 10 minutes as authorities moved closer to the crowd.At 6:35 p.m., authorities began charging the crowd in lockstep with their shields raised, some using their batons to strike the protestors as gas canisters were deployed.Trump walked over to the church shortly after 7 p.m.

Attorney General William Barr on Monday evening ordered authorities to clear a crowd of protesters that had gathered near the White House, according to a Justice Department official, minutes ahead of President Donald Trump’s televised address from the Rose Garden.

Barr and other top officials from agencies responsible for securing the White House had previously planned to secure a wider perimeter around Lafayette Square, a federally owned green space just north of the building, in response to fires and destruction caused by protestors on Sunday night.

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That plan, developed earlier Monday, would have cleared the area later used for the president’s walk to the nearby St. John’s Episcopal Church for a photo-op by 4 p.m. ET, the official said.

But it never happened. When Barr arrived at Lafayette Square just after 6 p.m. in a scene that was captured on news cameras and elicited heckles from the large, peaceful crowd, the attorney general saw that the area had not been emptied, and told police to clear the area, the official said.

If federal law enforcement was met with resistance by the protesters, crowd control measures should be implemented, Barr had said, according to the official.

The Washington Post first reported Barr’s direct involvement.

Barr had been told that police believed protestors were gathering rocks to throw at law enforcement, and while he was in the park, water bottles were thrown in his direction, the official said. CNN did not witness any water bottles being thrown at the attorney general. Camera footage shows him standing and watching the crowd for several minutes, flanked by a security detail and two senior department officials.

Just before 6:24 p.m., police broadcast their first warning for the crowd to distance. A CNN correspondent reporting from the rooftop of a nearby hotel heard three warnings broadcast over the next 10 minutes as authorities moved closer to the crowd.

At 6:35 p.m., authorities began charging the crowd in lockstep with their shields raised, some using their batons to strike the protestors as gas canisters were deployed.

Trump walked over to the church shortly after 7 p.m.