Crowd of thousands clogs downtown Richmond to defend right to bear arms
RICHMOND, Va. — Tens of thousands of protesters, many decked out in tactical gear and toting assault-style rifles, are amassing in the streets of Virginia’s capital city in a show of defiance against stringent new Democratic gun control measures.
State, local and legislative police have turned out in kind, herding crowds of people past miles of chain-link fencing and crowd-control barriers for fear of a repeat of the deadly violence that marred a white-supremacist rally in nearby Charlottesville in 2017.
By mid-morning, however, the sprawling protest had shown no signs of tension, nor any indication of the far-right or anti-racism factions officials had feared could trigger a clash in the midst of the heavily armed crowd.
Much of that fear was the product of an alleged plot to sow violence at the event by members of an avowed neo-Nazi group — foiled last week when the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested three of the group’s members, including Patrik Mathews, a former Canadian Forces reservist.