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Federal officials over the weekend were thrust into the middle of the
violent fury sweeping cities across the country following the death of
George Floyd, the unarmed black man killed in police custody in
Minneapolis on May 25. Graphic video showing Floyd’s death as police
officer Derek Chauvin pressed a knee into Floyd’s neck for nearly nine
minutes as he begged for air sparked international revulsion and days of protests across the country.
Late Friday, one Federal Protective Service officer was killed and another critically wounded after the two were shot at the Ronald V. Dellums
Federal Building in California. The officers were protecting the federal courthouse there as protesters clashed with police nearby.
At a briefing on Saturday, Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf
said: “Last night in Oakland, California, an assassin cowardly shot two
Federal Protective Service contractors as they stood watch over a protest.
One officer was killed and the other is in critical condition. The FBI,
the Oakland Police, supported by the Department of Homeland Security, are investigating that attack. Let me express my deepest condolences to the
family members of these two FPS contractors. Any loss in the DHS family
impacts all of us and I want the loved ones of these brave officers to
know that you have the support of the department behind you. ”
Wolf also noted that earlier in the week someone threw a “molotov
cocktail” into an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in an attempt
to burn it down. “As of late, we have witnessed an outright assault on our
law enforcement community,” he said.
In Washington, as elsewhere, demonstrations turned violent. More than 60
Secret Service uniformed officers and special agents were injured near the White House after being hit with bricks, rocks, bottles and fireworks in clashes between Friday night and early Sunday morning, the agency tweeted
on Sunday. Demonstrators vandalized six Secret Service vehicles and
attempted to knock over security barriers, according to the agency.
“Secret Service personnel were also directly physically assaulted as they
were kicked, punched and exposed to bodily fluids,” the agency said. “A
total of 11 injured employees were transported to a local hospital and
were treated for non-life threatening injuries.”
Numerous federal buildings were damaged in the protests. In a series of
tweets Sunday morning, Zack Stanton, a digital editor at Politico
magazine, chronicled some of the vandalism: protesters smashed a window
and defaced the Veterans Affairs headquarters building, and smashed the
doors and windows at the National Treasury Employees Union headquarters.
The National Park Service reported vandalized monuments on the National
Mall. “For generations the Mall has been our nation’s premier civic
gathering space for non-violent demonstrations, and we ask individuals to
carry on that tradition,” the National Park Service tweeted.
On Sunday, 5,000 National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in
response to civil disturbances in 15 states and Washington, and another
2,000 were preparing for activation if needed.
“The situation is fluid so those numbers can change rapidly,” according to
a statement from the National Guard.
https://www.govexec.com/management/2020/05/weekend-violent-protests- leaves-trail-damage-feds/165786/
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