CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — A Confederate statue in Charlottesville, Va., that became a rallying point for white nationalists was found vandalized Wednesday with an expletive aimed toward President Trump.
The profanity was graffitied on the base of the General Robert E. Lee statue in white paint, TV station WVIR reported. Blue paint was also splattered around the base, according to the station.
The city’s Parks and Recreation department was notified to clean the statue, police spokesman Tyler Hawn said.
Charlottesville, like other cities around the United States, has been wrestling for years with what to do with Confederate monuments in its public spaces.
White nationalists objected to a city plan to remove the statue of Lee and flocked to Charlottesville in 2017 for a rally. Hundreds of others showed up to protest the statue’s defenders, and the event descended into violence. Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old activist and paralegal, was killed and dozens more were injured when a white supremacist drove his car into a crowd.
A lawsuit over the statue-removal plan is ongoing, and the figure of Lee on horseback has remained in place. The statue has been vandalized several times before.
ASSOCIATED PRESS