Skip to content

26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville

Wildfires Taint West Coast Vineyards With Taste of Smoke

TURNER, Ore.—Smoke from the West Coast wildfires has tainted grapes in some of the nation’s most celebrated wine regions with an ashy flavor that could spell disaster for the 2020 vintage. Wineries in California, Oregon, and Washington have survived severe wildfires before, but the smoke from this year’s blazes has been especially bad—thick enough to obscure vineyards drooping with clusters of grapes almost ready for harvest. Day after day, some West Coast cities endured some of the worst air quality in the world. No one knows the extent of the smoke damage to the crop, and growers are trying to assess the severity. If tainted grapes are made into wine without steps to minimize the harm or weed out the damaged fruit, the result could be wine so bad that…

26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville

A demonstration in Louisville on Thursday turned violent, leading to the arrest of 26 people.

People upset that only one officer was charged in relation to Breonna Taylor’s death gathered and began causing damage, breaking windows at Jeff Ruby’s Steak house before inflicting further damage at various locations as they moved through downtown, the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) said in an incident summary.

At one point, people tossed a flare into the downtown library in an attempt to start a fire, which was not successful.

Just before the curfew hour arrived, the crowd entered the property of the First Unitarian Church on Fourth Street.

“People gathered on the property of the church, which allowed them to stay there as the curfew had expired,” LMPD stated.

26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville Protesters march through downtown Louisville, Ky., Sept. 23, 2020. (Jon Cherry/Getty Images)

After police officers secured the area around the library so the broken windows could be addressed, officers left the area.

Protesters were given directions on how to leave the church and were able to walk back to their vehicles, police said.

Twenty-six people were arrested for charges including unlawful assembly, failure to disperse, and riot in the first degree. Of the 24 whose addresses were listed, all were from Louisville except for one, who hailed from Prospect, Kentucky.

Rioting on Wednesday started hours after Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican, announced that one of the three police officers involved in executing a search warrant on Taylor’s home in March was being charged.

Brett Hankison, who was fired in June, was charged with three counts of wanton endangerment for firing shots into a neighboring apartment, Cameron said.

But no officers were charged with Taylor’s death because they were responding to shots fired at them by her boyfriend.

26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville People prepare plywood shields for a march in Louisville, Ky., Sept. 24, 2020. (Bryan Woolston/Reuters)

Sgt. Jon Mattingly, and Detective Myles Cosgrove “were justified in their use of force after having been fired upon,” Cameron told a news conference, adding later: “This justification bars us from pursuing criminal charges in Ms. Breonna Taylor’s death.”

Activists hoped that the officers would face murder charges.

“We’ve got to take it lying down that the law won’t protect us, that they can get away with killing us,” Lavel White, who regularly protests in Louisville, told the Associated Press.

“If we can’t get justice for Breonna Taylor, can we get justice for anybody?”

City and state officials have urged protesters to remain peaceful.

“I do know this violence is not the answer. And destruction is not the answer,” Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer, a Democrat, told reporters at a briefing earlier Thursday.

26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville Demonstrators march through the streets in Louisville, Ky., Sept. 24, 2020. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Two police officers shot during demonstrations on Wednesday are expected to recover, Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder told reporters.

The suspect, Larynzo Johnson, 26, was arrested and charged with two counts of assault and 14 counts of wanton endangerment.

Attempted murder charges are possible down the road, officials said.

Wednesday’s rioting included 16 different instances of looting.

Kentucky’s National Guard is assisting police with trying to keep the peace. For now, Kentucky officials are not taking up President Donald Trump on his offer to send federal forces.

Follow Zachary on Twitter: @zackstieber

Focus News: 26 Arrested as Demonstration Turns Violent in Louisville

DOJ: More Than 300 Charged With Crimes Committed Near or at Protests Since May

More than 300 people have been charged for committing crimes “adjacent to or under the guise of peaceful demonstrations since the end of May,” the Department of Justice announced Thursday. The crimes were committed in 29 states and Washington, authorities said. Assaulting a law enforcement officer, attempted murder, arson, and damaging federal property are among the charges filed. Approximately 80 people have been charged with offenses relating to arson and explosives; 15 have been charged with damaging federal property. Rioters inflicted millions of dollars of damage to city and federal property across the United States in recent months, including the Minneapolis Police Department’s Third Precinct, the Nashville City Hall in Tennessee, and the聽Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse, a federal building, in Portland, Oregon. Criminals have also targeted small and big businesses,…