Dylan Garner/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP
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The statue of Davis was one of five statues beheaded or torn down in Virginia on Wednesday night. Eighty miles down the road in Portsmouth, protesters attacked and defaced the Portsmouth Confederate monument, which featured multiple statues.As police looked on and a marching band played, demonstrators beheaded four Confederate statues before pulling one down using a tow rope on Wednesday night. Video footage shared on social media showed the statue hitting one protester directly on the head as it fell.
One witness, who identified as a Black Lives Matter activist, described what happened."It came and fully hit him in the head, and we could see that his skull was actually showing," he told local TV station WAVY. "He was convulsing on the ground. He lost a great amount of blood. And we ask that everybody pray for that man right now.”
A police statement said a man had been seriously injured at the scene and hospitalized.Responding to questions about police standing back and letting the protesters attack the monument, Portsmouth Police Chief Angela Greene said she had not given officers an order to ignore the destruction of property, but said “an elected official” directed them to let vandalism of the Confederate monument to occur — though she refused to name the official, cryptically said saying the person “was on plenty of platforms and media outlets today.”
READ: People are tearing down racist statues worldwide because governments won'tHours before the statues in Virginia were brought down, a group of activists tore down a statue of Christopher Columbus on Minnesota's state Capitol ground. A day earlier another statue of Christopher Columbus in Richmond was torn down by protesters, set on fire, and submerged in a lake, while in Boston’s North End, a Columbus statue was beheaded.
Cover: The statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis is splattered with paint after it was toppled Wednesday night, June 10, 2020, along Monument Drive in Richmond, Va. (Dylan Garner/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP)