By Kyle Becker
Donald Trump was handed a legal exoneration on Monday night regarding a batch of lawsuits brought against him by protesters at Lafayette Park. The judge dismissed the cases.
âA federal judge has dismissed the bulk of a series of lawsuits against the federal government over the use of force to drive Black Lives Matter protesters out of Lafayette Park last year, but will allow protesters to continue to seek damages from Washington, D.C. and Arlington County, Va. over the actions of their police forces,â Politico reported.
âU.S. District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich rejected demonstratorsâ claims for damages against former officials such as President Donald Trump, Attorney General William Barr and Defense Secretary Mark Esper, as well as some current federal officials,â the report added.
âThe plaintiffs asserted the government used unnecessary force to enable a photo op of President Donald Trump holding a Bible outside of the historical St. Johnâs Church,â the Washington Post noted. âBut U.S. District Judge Dabney L. Friedrich of Washington called allegations that federal officials conspired to make way for the photo too speculative.â
It is, however, much more definitive than that. An Inspector Generalâs report on the Lafayette Park incident found that it was not cleared of protesters so he could take a âphoto-op.â
âWhen federal police officers violently cleared protesters from the cityâs Lafayette Park in June 2020, they did it so a contractor could install fencing â not to let President Donald Trump hold a photo opportunity at a nearby church, an investigation by the Interior Departmentâs inspector general has found,â NBC reported.
âThat finding, published Wednesday, is likely to surprise many critics of Trump, who have long asserted that the president or his attorney general ordered the operation to pave the way for an act of political theater,â the report continued. âThat is also the central allegation of a federal lawsuit by Black Lives Matter against the Justice Department.â
âThe report found no evidence of that, but did find that Attorney General William Barr urged officials to speed up the clearing process once Trump had decided to walk through the area that evening,â the report added.
Donald Trump reacted to the Department of the Interior Inspector Generalâs findings in a statement.
âThank you to the Department of the Interior Inspector General for Completely and Totally exonerating me in the clearing of Lafayette Park!â Trump wrote.
âAs we have said all along, and it was backed up in todayâs highly detailed and professionally written report, our fine Park Police made the decision to clear the park to allow a contractor to safely install anti scale fencing to protect from Antifa rioters, radical BLM protestors, and other violent demonstrators who are causing chaos and death to our cities,â Trump continued. âIn this instance, they tried burning down the church the day before the clearing.â
âFortunately, we were there to stop the fire from spreading beyond the basement â and it was a great honor and privilege to do so,â he added. âAgain, thank you to the Inspector General!â
Rachel Maddow, the New York Times, NBC and others reported on the clearing of Lafayette Park as a âscandalâ in June of 2020. NBC called it âamong the most ridiculous presidential photo-ops anyone has ever seen, at least in this countryâ in regards to Donald Trump holding up a Bible in front of a church.
âWhen the history of the Trump presidency is written, the clash at Lafayette Square may be remembered as one of its defining moments,â the New York Times claimed.
If so, one of the âdefining momentsâ of the Trump presidency was one of âcomplete and total exoneration.â