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Police End NAACP Sit-in Against Trump Attorney General Nominee


Senate Armed Services Committee member Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., arrives at Trump Tower, Nov. 15, 2016 in New York.
Senate Armed Services Committee member Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., arrives at Trump Tower, Nov. 15, 2016 in New York.

Several NAACP protesters led by their national president were escorted away in handcuffs by police after staging a sit-in Tuesday at the Alabama office of Sen. Jeff Sessions, the nominee for U.S. attorney general, the civil rights group said.

The organization held the demonstration to protest Sessions' nomination by President-elect Donald Trump, saying Sessions has a questionable record on civil rights and "can't be trusted to be the chief law enforcement officer for voting rights.''

"We have an attorney general nominee who does not acknowledge the reality of voter suppression while mouthing faith in the myth of voter fraud,'' Brooks said by phone earlier in Tuesday's protest.

The sit-in at Sessions' office in Mobile, Alabama - the city the Republican senator calls home - began around after 11:00 a.m. Tuesday. Demonstrators refused a request by the building manager to leave when the building closed for the day at 6:00 p.m. Police could be seen on video footage coming and handcuffing at least five protesters and escorted them to a police van.

"We all are aware of the laws of trespass. We are engaging in a voluntary act of civil disobedience," Brooks told the officers who arrived at the scene.

The NAACP broadcast the events live on the organization's Facebook page. Patricia Mokolo, a spokeswoman for the Alabama chapter of the NAACP said the demonstrators including Brooks were arrested, but she did not know of a charge.

A police spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment.

The all-day protest ended in handcuffs but without confrontation. Brooks shook the hands of the officers and the officers allowed the protesters to kneel and pray before they were led away.

Brooks criticized Sessions' prosecution of African-American voting rights activists on voter fraud charges when he was a U.S. attorney in Alabama. The group also raised concerns about the future of the Voting Rights Act under Sessions and noted allegations - raised decades ago in Sessions unsuccessful 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship - that Sessions made racially insensitive remarks when he was a U.S. attorney.

Sarah Isgur Flores, a spokeswoman for Sessions, said in a statement that the nominee has dedicated his career to upholding the rule of law, ensuring public safety and prosecuting government corruption.

"Many African-American leaders who've known him for decades attest to this and have welcomed his nomination to be the next Attorney General. These false portrayals of Senator Sessions will fail as tired, recycled, hyperbolic charges that have been thoroughly rebuked and discredited,'' the statement added.

In testimony at the 1986 confirmation hearing, Sessions was accused by some hearing witnesses of saying the NAACP was "un-American'' and saying he thought Ku Klux Klan members were "OK until I found out they smoke pot,''

Sessions said during the hearing that the Klan remark was a joke and that other remarks were mischaracterized. What he had said, Sessions said, was that civil rights groups hurt themselves when "they take positions that people think are un-American they hurt themselves.'' He then praised the work of the NAACP.

The demonstration marked the latest criticism of Trump's pick for attorney general. Sessions' confirmation hearings are expected to begin next week, highlighted by a vigorous push both by those favoring the nomination and those opposed to it.

Former Democratic Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, who was part of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund team representing the black civil rights activists in the voter fraud prosecution, on Tuesday urged U.S. senators to reject Sessions' nomination.

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