Arrests Made After Group Blocks Road Leading to Mount Rushmore

Zachary Stieber
By Zachary Stieber
July 4, 2020US News
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Arrests Made After Group Blocks Road Leading to Mount Rushmore
A sheriff's deputy arrests a protester who helped block the road to Mount Rushmore National Monument in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

At least 13 protesters were arrested Friday after they blocked the highway that leads to Mount Rushmore for hours with disabled vehicles.

The group positioned white vans across the road and took the tires off, making it more difficult to remove them.

Tow trucks eventually removed the vehicles.

Law enforcement officers arrested over a dozen protesters who blocked Highway 16A, or Iron Mountain Road, according to the Sioux Falls Argus Leader.

Pepper spray was deployed during the clearing of the road.

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Protesters confront a line of law enforcement officers on the road leading to Mount Rushmore ahead of President Donald Trump’s visit to the memorial in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Stephen Groves/AP Photo)
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Trump supporters, some who were blocked from reaching Mount Rushmore by a blockade set up by Native American protesters, gather near where protesters clashed with law enforcement officers in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Stephen Groves/AP Photo)
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Protesters hug shortly before being arrested for blocking the road to Mount Rushmore National Monument in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)
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Police arrest people as activists and members of different tribes from the region who blocked the road to Mount Rushmore National Monument in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)
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Police arrest a protester who helped block the road to Mount Rushmore National Monument in Keystone, S.D., on July 3, 2020. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

Some of the group dispersed after South Dakota National Guard members arrived on the scene and officers declared the assembling unlawful. Others were arrested after declining to adhere to a 30-minute warning to leave the road.

The Pennington County Sheriff’s Department couldn’t be reached Saturday morning.

Protesters said they oppose President Donald Trump’s administration. Trump, a Republican, was speaking during an Independence Day event at Mount Rushmore, a national monument.

“Respect our right to exist or expect our resistance. We are orphans crying in the night and we will keep making noise until they hear us,” Freddie Longworth, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe, told the Argus Leader. He said he was using the word orphans to reference Native Americans who were negatively impacted by treaties groups made with the United States.

A number of Trump supporters said they were unable to get through on the highway because of the protest group.

From The Epoch Times

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