Patricia N. Saffran, Lee Statue in Purgatory Awaiting its Fate in Charlottesville
Patricia N. Saffran
The Charlottesville VA court case of December 2021, deciding the
fate of the valuable 1924 Shrady/Lentelli Robert E Lee Equestrian
monument has been postponed. At present, the bronze statue is sitting in
storage in a secret location in an unknown number of pieces. The
Plaintiffs, the Trevilian Station Battlefield Foundation and the
Ratcliffe Foundation, say cutting up and melting down the the statue was
illegal. They want the City to recomplete and restore the statue, or
find alternative uses for the bronze such as turning the pieces into a
canon for the battlefield if it can no longer be reassembled.
Apparently, in a video meeting, the Charlottesville City Council decided
to give the statue to the Jefferson School African American Heritage
Center to melt down, which was possibly undemocratic and not legally
binding.
A person connected with the Monument Fund, which has been providing
litigation support, explains, “The trial was postponed April 20, 2023,
until after the Virginia Supreme Court clarifies out its very recent
ruling in another case, called the Berry decision, which has a bearing on part of this case. In summary, Berry
ruled that everything every Virginia locality did in 2021, if they met
in virtual session rather than in person, was invalid. The Open
Government law required them to meet in person. Charlottesville City
Council met by video, not in person, when it voted in 2021 to give the
Lee monument to the Jefferson School African American Center to be
melted down. We asked the Judge to revisit his previous ruling that
dismissed FOIA, and he did, so that is back in the case. But the
consequence of it coming back in the case is he gave the Defendants a
continuance so they can prepare to respond. We don’t know when
the Supreme Court will rule, so we don’t know when the trial will be
rescheduled.”
It should be noted that the Jefferson School has deep pockets to
fight this case. Major donors to the $1 million Lee statue meltdown
project, called “Swords to Plowshares,” include George Soros, Elizabeth
Breeden, and City taxpayer money, which alone nearly totals $1
million.While Andrea Douglas, executive director of the Jefferson
School, characterized the goal of the project to turn the “Lee” bronze
ingots into a new sculpture for healing the community, the price tag is
far greater than a newly commissioned bronze.
Another current Virginia court case involves the Confederate
Monument, from 1876-1881 designed by architect Charles E, Cassell, which
was partially forcibly pulled down in Portsmouth, June 10, 2020. There
Police Chief Angela Greene charged those involved, a total of 19
individuals, including State Senator Louise Lucas, with two felony
charges, a conspiracy to commit a felony and injury to a monument in
excess of $1,000. Portsmouth’s monument was damaged during the protest
which saw Chris Green, a protestor who was a standing near the monument,
seriously injured and hospitalized when part of a statue was pulled
down on his head.
The monument was erected for “the Confederate dead of Portsmouth
and Norfolk County,” by the Ladies Memorial Aid Association, founded in
1866. It had already been scheduled to be moved legally to the nearby
Cedar Grove Cemetery but that didn’t satisfy Senator Lucas and several
local NAACP officers. They went ahead with the protest and risky
takedown. The protestors violently decapitated some of the white bronze
alloy Confederate soldiers with a sledgehammer as well as pulling one
down. The protestors damaged the monument so much so that a decision was
made by the City Council to remove the remaining obelisk and generic
figures, which are now in storage in an undisclosed location.
Charges were later dismissed by an activist Richmond judge,
November 16, 2020. One week later, Senator Lucas’s daughter, the
Portsmouth Vice-Mayor and City Council member, Lisa Lucas-Burke, was
charged with misdemeanors by a local resident for demanding Chief Greene
be fired. Her actions were apparently contrary to the town code where
an elected official cannot call for removal of the police chief.
Lucas-Burke’s activism had an effect. Police Chief Angela Greene was
soon after terminated. She is currently police chief in Lexington, VA.
Chief Greene said on the phone, December 2, 2022 “I can’t speak about
the case because it’s being appealed.” Previously, Chief Greene
described that she was merely following her oath of office to uphold VA
law.
Chief Greene’s lawyer, Thomas K. Plofchan, Jr. recently explained,
“Chief Greene filed a wrongful termination and defamation lawsuit in
relation to her termination. The trial court dismissed the cases without
providing reasoning. This has been appealed to the Court of Appeals of
Virginia. Briefs have been filed and the parties are awaiting scheduling
of oral argument.”
Both the Charlottesville and Portsmouth court cases feature
politicians and bureaucrats following their own agendas. In Portsmouth,
they also had little regard for public safety. Given the unpredictable
Virginia courts, it will be interesting to see their decisions.
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