NBC News: Judges Who Ruled Against Trump Say Harassment and Threats Have Upended...
Tim Walz Says ICE Raids Are What Happens ‘When They No Longer Hide...
Ho Ho No: Libertarian Compares Santa to Illegals, Gets Ratio'd Into the North...
Former EU Commissioner Butthurt About Being Banned From the US for Censorship
Derek Hunter Violated X's Rules Against Hateful Content With Post About Jennifer Welch
Peak Christmas Nerdery: Full Probability Analysis of Why the Home Alone Family Slept...
Margaret Sullivan Says Journalism's Goal Is to 'Afflict the Comfortable and Comfort the...
Conservative Clash: Bari Weiss Allegedly Turns on Megyn Kelly After She Snubs CBS...
A Warm AI Christmas Card From The Democrats, But Not Really
Cali's Insane Solution to Wildfires: Force 2M Homeowners to Rip Out Gardens Instead...
Katie Miller Hits Taylor Swift's Donation to Feeding America With a Reality Check
Merry Christmas from the Map-Challenged: Jesus the Palestinian, According to Clueless Left...
'You Know Who I Am': Former RI Mayoral Candidate 'Abused' by Cop Who...
Belated Festivus Grievances: X's Broken Algo, Scams Stealing Billions, and Anti-Semitism C...
ICE Aims to Speed Up Deportations by Renovating Warehouses to Hold 80,000 Illegals...

On judge's order, Charlottesville removes tarps that have covered Confederate statues since August

It was last August that city crews in Charlottesville, Va., covered statues of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson with big black tarps that resembled heavy-duty trash bags, but now those tarps have finally come down under a judge’s order.

Advertisement

WVIR reports that Judge Richard Moore made the ruling Tuesday citing the city council’s “temporary” placement of the tarps. Plaintiffs have argued that state law that prohibits removing monuments or memorials to war veterans.

Charlottesville City Council voted unanimously on August 21, 2017 to place “mourning shrouds” on the two statues. For the record, here’s what the “mourning shrouds” looked like:

Advertisement

In somewhat related news, WVIR reports that sometime Wednesday night, only hours after the judge issued his order, someone vandalized a statue of George Rogers Clark in Charlottesville by spray-painting “I can’t breathe” across it.

It’s unclear if the vandal had any idea that George Rogers Clark was an officer in the Revolutionary War, but it’s not the first time vandals have hit Revolutionary War memorials before.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement