Home » Virginia News » Student government says U.Va.
Student government says U.Va. should pay 2017 rally victims $1 million
Neal Augenstein | naugenstein@wtop.com
December 7, 2021, 10:57 AM
The University of Virginias Student Council is calling on the school to pay victims of the 2017 Unite the Right Rally $1 million, and apologize for not doing more to head-off violence during the tiki torch march on campus.
The councils resolution came a week after a federal jury awarded about $26 million to nine plaintiffs, who sued 14 individuals and 10 organizers of the white nationalist and white supremacy rally in Charlottesville.
On Aug. 11, 2017, a group of white supremacists and white nationalists marched through the University of Virginia campus, shouting anti-Semitic and racist chants, ending at the statue of Thomas Jefferson in front of the Rotunda.
While on university grounds, the white supremacist and neo-Nazis were allowed to verbally and physically assault counter protesters consisting of students, faculty and Charlottesville residents, according to the student resolution. These actions included hitting them, pouring lighter fluid on them, and burning them with their lit tiki torches, all in full view of police forces.
The resolution cites a timeline in which university public safety officials became aware of the planned march but didnt take action to prevent it.
Citing the City of Charlottesvilles official independent review of events leading to the Aug. 12, 2017, death of counterprotester Heather Heyer, the resolution found it likely that the insufficient police response on Friday night emboldened people who intended to engage in similar acts of violence on Saturday [Aug. 12]. Anyone who came to Charlottesville to violently confront others was undoubtedly encouraged by what he saw in person or on video at U.Va.
{snip}