Critical Rights and Rule-of-Law Concern

Lafayette Square: Militarized Crackdown on Peaceful Protesters for a Photo Opportunity

Amid nationwide protests following the murder of George Floyd, federal law enforcement — including National Guard units, Secret Service, Park Police, and Bureau of Prisons officers — forcibly dispersed a peaceful crowd in Lafayette Square using pepper balls, chemical irritants, rubber bullets, and mounted police. Minutes later, Trump walked through the cleared square to hold a Bible at St. John's Church in a staged photo.

Overview

On the evening of June 1, 2020, as nationwide protests over the police murder of George Floyd continued across American cities, the Trump administration staged a dramatic display of authority at Lafayette Square — the park directly north of the White House that had become a protest gathering point.

At approximately 6:34 PM — 26 minutes before D.C.'s 7 PM curfew — federal law enforcement officers moved through the crowd without issuing a dispersal order. They used pepper ball projectiles, CS gas chemical components, rubber bullets, and mounted police to violently disperse the assembled crowd, which included peaceful protesters, legal observers, and journalists.

The Photo Op

Minutes after the square was cleared, President Trump emerged from the White House and walked through the cleared area — past discarded signs, helmeted officers, and the lingering cloud of chemical irritants — to St. John's Episcopal Church, which is across the street from Lafayette Square. He stood before the church and held a Bible for photographers. He did not pray, did not speak, and did not enter the church. The entire episode lasted approximately five minutes.

The bishop of the Diocese of Washington, Mariann Budde, said she was "outraged" and had not given permission for the visit. The church had been used as a first-aid station by protesters in the days before.

Official Accountability

Attorney General William Barr was personally present in Lafayette Square before and during the dispersal and was identified in reporting as having given the order to expand the security perimeter. The Department of Interior's Inspector General later confirmed that Barr's office ordered the expansion. The IG's report controversially concluded this was unrelated to the photo op — a finding widely criticized given the six-minute interval between the clearing and Trump's emergence.

Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley both walked with Trump through the cleared square in uniform. Milley later apologized publicly, stating: "I should not have been there. My presence in that moment, and in that environment, created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics."

Esper was fired by Trump in November 2020 after a series of disagreements, including his public statement that he did not support deploying the active-duty military against civilian protesters.

The District of Columbia and the ACLU filed lawsuits on behalf of cleared protesters alleging First and Fourth Amendment violations. The government settled two of the suits for a combined $2 million without admitting wrongdoing in 2022.

Broader Context

The Lafayette Square incident took place in the context of Trump's broader posture toward the George Floyd protests, in which he called governors "weak," threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy soldiers against American civilians, referred to protesters as "terrorists" and "thugs," and tweeted "when the looting starts, the shooting starts" — a phrase originating with a Miami police chief known for violence against Black residents during the civil rights era.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. George Floyd murdered

    Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin kills George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for over nine minutes. Protests erupt nationwide.

  2. Trump threatens to invoke Insurrection Act

    Trump convenes a call with governors and threatens to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy active-duty military to suppress protests. He calls state officials 'weak' and tells them to 'dominate' protesters.

  3. Lafayette Square cleared — 6:34 PM

    Without warning and 26 minutes before the curfew goes into effect, federal officers attack the peaceful crowd with pepper balls, CS gas, rubber bullets, and mounted police. Journalists are among those hit. Medics from a First Aid station set up by the protesters are also dispersed.

  4. Trump photo op — 7:01 PM

    Trump walks from the White House through the now-cleared Lafayette Square, accompanied by officials including AG Barr, Defense Secretary Esper, Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley, and advisor Ivanka Trump. He stands in front of St. John's Church and holds a Bible for photographs without speaking.

  5. Defense Secretary Esper publicly distances himself

    Secretary of Defense Mark Esper publicly states he was not aware the walk was a photo op and did not support invoking the Insurrection Act to deploy active-duty military domestically. He is fired by Trump months later.

  6. Former Joint Chiefs chairman Milley expresses regret

    Gen. Mark Milley, who walked with Trump through the square in military uniform, later apologizes: 'I should not have been there. My presence... created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics.'

  7. DC Park Police IG investigation launched

    The Interior Department's Office of Inspector General launches an investigation into whether the timing of the crowd dispersal was connected to Trump's planned photo op.

  8. IG report: Barr ordered expanded perimeter

    The Interior Department OIG report finds that Park Police leadership was told by Barr's office to expand the perimeter — but claims the timing was not connected to Trump's photo walk. Critics note the timeline contradicts this conclusion.

Sources

  1. Protesters Dispersed With Tear Gas So Trump Could Pose at Church — The New York Times
  2. Trump's Church Visit Angers Bishop; Protesters Were Cleared From Park — NPR archived ✓
  3. Probe into use of force to clear DC protesters finds Barr ordered it — The Associated Press
  4. Capitol Grounds: Additional Enhancements Needed to Improve Security Posture — Government Accountability Office
  5. U.S. Park Police Used Force to Clear White House Protest Area Ahead of Trump Walk — Reuters
  6. Trump Admin Paid Over $2 Million to Settle Lafayette Square Protester Lawsuit — NBC Washington archived ✓

Verification

Publication provenance

Related records

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