Ted Williams: Manhattan DA is right not to prosecute protesters for minor offenses
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The Manhattan district attorney was right to not prosecute protesters for breaking the city's curfew and other minor offenses, defense attorney Ted Williams said Saturday.
Appearing on "Fox & Friends Weekend," Williams said the people marching against police brutality and systemic racism are simply exercising their First Amendment rights.
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"In the last two weeks, America has seen a black man killed on national TV at the hands of a police officer," he said. "And I think they are exercising their rights. ... I'm happy that they are not being indicted [and given] a criminal record that could follow them, perhaps the rest of their lives."
DA Cyrus Vance Jr. announced Friday that prosecution of protesters charged with low-level offenses "undermines critical bonds between law enforcement and the communities we serve.”
According to the NYPD, nearly 2,500 protest-related arrests have been made since May 28.
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"Fox & Friends" host Griff Jenkins asked Williams whether the decision by Vance could encourage lawlessness: "Here's the problem. If no one's getting prosecuted from really egregious rioting to breaking curfew [and] lower-lying offenses, then what's to stop these from growing and becoming far more dangerous in the future?" .
"Well, it could very well become far more dangerous in the future," Williams replied. "But I think you have to parse out legitimate demonstration with rabble-rousers -- those people who loot, rob, steal and kill."
"And I think DA Vance is saying that he is definitely going to prosecute people who rob, steal and kill," he added.
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Williams pointed to New York City's 8 p.m. ET curfew.
"New York put a curfew in place and they did not enforce the curfew for several nights. So all of a sudden, now they want to prosecute these kids?" he asked.
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"And Griff, try to understand -- these are young people. A lot of them, the majority of them. And, these [criminal] records could follow these young people the rest of their lives, all because they wanted to exercise their First Amendment rights," Williams said.