Bicyclist attacks teens posting flyers promoting George Floyd protests
Police on Friday arrested a Maryland man on charges connected to an attack on a group of young adults posting flyers on a bike trail about protests related to George Floyd, the black man who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.
Anthony Brennan III, a 60-year-old white man from Kensington, was charged with three counts of second-degree assault for the attack on a young man and two young women early Monday afternoon along a bike trail in Bethesda, Maryland, close to the Washington, D.C. border.
Also on Friday, the branding company Made to Order, which Brennan worked for according to information online, said that it fired an employee “for completely unacceptable behavior toward peaceful demonstrators.”
Brennan’s arrest came after the Maryland-Capital National Park Police received hundreds of tips about possible suspects on the heels of the release on social media of a dramatic video that captured an enraged bicyclist who ripped the flyers out of the hands of the three people who were posting flyers on the Capital Crescent Bike Trail.
Police said that detectives “utilized various sources” to corroborate tips before Brennan became their primary suspect. At least two other men were incorrectly identified as the assailant, and police put out statements earlier Friday pointing that out.
Hunter Walker, a Yahoo News reporter who covers the White House, tweeted that he had provided Brennan’s name to police after receiving a tip about him. Walker mentioned in his tweet that Brennan had an account on the Strava app, which is used by bicyclists and runners to share their routes and details about how long their rides or runs took with other users.
Investigators contacted Brennan and his lawyer Friday.
“Consent was provided to search his home while members of the State’s Attorney’s Office and Park Police were present. Items of evidentiary value were seized,” police said in a statement.
“A subsequent arrest warrant was obtained and served on Mr. Brennan this evening after he voluntarily turned himself into detectives.”
In the video, the bicyclist is seen holding the group’s flyers, and then violently grabbing the arm of a small 19-year-old woman among them and wrenching what appeared to be blue straps used for hanging up the flyers off of her wrist.
As he does so, a female companion of the woman frantically yells, “Do not touch her!”
The cyclist is then seen on the video angrily walking over to his bike when “he sees me recording him and sees the fact that I recorded him as he was doing that, and he grabs his bike and he runs it into me and pins me to the ground,” a man who was with the two women told NBC 4 Washington.
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Видео Bicyclist attacks teens posting flyers promoting George Floyd protests канала CNBC Television
Anthony Brennan III, a 60-year-old white man from Kensington, was charged with three counts of second-degree assault for the attack on a young man and two young women early Monday afternoon along a bike trail in Bethesda, Maryland, close to the Washington, D.C. border.
Also on Friday, the branding company Made to Order, which Brennan worked for according to information online, said that it fired an employee “for completely unacceptable behavior toward peaceful demonstrators.”
Brennan’s arrest came after the Maryland-Capital National Park Police received hundreds of tips about possible suspects on the heels of the release on social media of a dramatic video that captured an enraged bicyclist who ripped the flyers out of the hands of the three people who were posting flyers on the Capital Crescent Bike Trail.
Police said that detectives “utilized various sources” to corroborate tips before Brennan became their primary suspect. At least two other men were incorrectly identified as the assailant, and police put out statements earlier Friday pointing that out.
Hunter Walker, a Yahoo News reporter who covers the White House, tweeted that he had provided Brennan’s name to police after receiving a tip about him. Walker mentioned in his tweet that Brennan had an account on the Strava app, which is used by bicyclists and runners to share their routes and details about how long their rides or runs took with other users.
Investigators contacted Brennan and his lawyer Friday.
“Consent was provided to search his home while members of the State’s Attorney’s Office and Park Police were present. Items of evidentiary value were seized,” police said in a statement.
“A subsequent arrest warrant was obtained and served on Mr. Brennan this evening after he voluntarily turned himself into detectives.”
In the video, the bicyclist is seen holding the group’s flyers, and then violently grabbing the arm of a small 19-year-old woman among them and wrenching what appeared to be blue straps used for hanging up the flyers off of her wrist.
As he does so, a female companion of the woman frantically yells, “Do not touch her!”
The cyclist is then seen on the video angrily walking over to his bike when “he sees me recording him and sees the fact that I recorded him as he was doing that, and he grabs his bike and he runs it into me and pins me to the ground,” a man who was with the two women told NBC 4 Washington.
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