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City man arrested after Mexican-flag burning
Brady McCombs / Arizona Daily Star | April 13 2006
A Tucson man was arrested Tuesday for his role in the
burning of a Mexican flag as part of a counterprotest at a pro-immigration
rally.
At about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Tucson police cited Roy Warden, 58, on suspicion
of assault, criminal damage and reckless burning, and then released him,
according to Sgt. Decio Hopffer.
Video footage shot Monday by police and the media showed
Warden assaulting a TV cameraman and a photographer, Hopffer said. Because
only one of the men pressed charges, there is only one assault charge.
Warden faces the criminal-damage charge for harm done to the concrete shuffleboard
court where Warden's group was burning the Mexican flag, Hopffer said.
Warden and his group, Border Guardians, arrived at Armory Park just after noon Monday to stage a counterprotest to the 15,000 marchers who were protesting what they see as unfair immigration laws. At about 2:15 p.m, they burned Mexican flags and tempers flared.
Police arrested two girls for throwing water at Warden and his group, and a scuffle broke out as police escorted them away. On Monday, Tucson police arrested six people on charges of aggravated assault on a peace officer, interfering with governmental operation, hindering prosecution and disturbing the peace.
Hopffer said police are still reviewing tape of the
scuffle.
Warden said the charges are a direct result of political pressure from the
Mexican Consulate.
"If they saw something unlawful, why didn't they
commit an arrest then?" Warden said.
He said he plans to represent himself at his court hearing on April 24 and
said he's confident he will clear himself of charges. In addition, he said
he plans to sue the cameraman for defamation of character and denying his
right to free speech.
Another member of Border Guardians, Laine Lawless,
called the arrest a petty way to punish the group for its dissenting voice.
March organizers also questioned why it took police so long to make the
arrest. They have a requested a meeting with city officials for Thursday
to discuss the issue, said Zoe Hammer, spokeswoman for Border Action Network,
one of the local human-rights groups that organized the march.
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