as kenosha boils police shooting u.s. investigates as rallying cry … · 1 hour ago · major...

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U(D54G1D)y+%!\![!$!" WASHINGTON — Trump ad- ministration officials on Wednes- day defended a new recommenda- tion that people without Covid-19 symptoms abstain from testing, even as scientists warned that the policy could hobble an already weak federal response as schools reopen and a potential autumn wave looms. The day after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued the revised guidance, there were conflicting reports on who was responsible. Two federal health officials said the shift came as a directive to the Atlanta-based C.D.C. from higher-ups in Wash- ington at the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services. Adm. Brett P. Giroir, the admin- istration’s coronavirus testing czar, called it a “C.D.C. action,” written with input from the agen- cy’s director, Dr. Robert R. Red- field. But he acknowledged that the revision came after a vigorous debate among members of the White House coronavirus task force — including its newest mem- ber, Dr. Scott W. Atlas, a frequent Fox News guest and a special ad- viser to President Trump. “We all signed off on it, the docs, Questions Swirl Around C.D.C.’s Shift on Testing By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG Finger-Pointing on Who Made the Decision Continued on Page A6 KENOSHA, Wis. — The Justice Department on Wednesday an- nounced a civil rights investiga- tion into the police shooting of a Black man in Kenosha, Wis., as new details emerged in the case, a white teenager who confronted demonstrators was arrested in connection with two deaths, and protests spread to athletes in three pro sports leagues. Protesters have poured into Ke- nosha’s streets to decry the shoot- ing of Jacob Blake, a Black father who was partially paralyzed after a white officer fired at him in front of his children. The authorities re- leased new details of the case on Wednesday that gave a clearer picture of why police officers con- fronted Mr. Blake, who they said had a knife. Amid the ire over the shooting of Mr. Blake, some in Kenosha have torched buildings, and the authorities have fired tear gas in an effort to clear the streets. Coun- terprotesters have also emerged, and gunfire broke out along one crowded, dark street late Tuesday, sending bystanders fleeing into parking lots and screaming in ter- ror. The violence that broke out came as demonstrators scuffled with a group of men carrying long guns who said they were protect- ing the area from looting. The au- thorities were investigating whether the white teenager who was arrested on Wednesday, iden- tified as Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was part of a vigilante group. His so- cial media accounts appeared to show an intense affinity for guns, law enforcement and President Trump. The fatal shooting followed a tense night of standoffs between the police and demonstrators and escalated a situation that had drawn the attention of Mr. Trump, who is in the third day of the Re- publican National Convention and has sought to portray Democratic cities as rife with violence and crime. Protests over the shooting of Mr. Blake also expanded to sports, where the N.B.A. post- poned multiple playoff games on Wednesday after the Milwaukee Bucks boycotted their matchup with the Orlando Magic. Mr. Rittenhouse was arrested in Antioch, Ill., and faces a charge of first-degree intentional homicide, according to a court document from Lake County, Ill. Antioch is about 30 minutes southwest of Ke- nosha, just over the Illinois line. Two men, a 26-year-old and a 36- year-old from Kenosha County U.S. INVESTIGATES POLICE SHOOTING AS KENOSHA BOILS NEW DETAILS RELEASED Teenager Is Arrested in Deaths of Protesters in Blake Case By JULIE BOSMAN and SARAH MERVOSH Continued on Page A18 WASHINGTON — President Trump moved within weeks of taking office to prohibit immi- grants from Sudan from entering the United States, citing terrorism threats and including it in his trav- el ban on some predominantly Muslim countries — restrictions that remain partly in place today. But on Tuesday, when Mr. Trump wanted to portray himself as pro-immigrant, he invited Neimat Abdelazim Awadelseid, a Sudanese woman who had just qualified to become a U.S. citizen, and four others to a White House naturalization ceremony that his re-election campaign featured prominently during the Republi- can National Convention. The president’s willingness to use the trappings of presidential power during a campaign conven- tion was a striking departure from previous presidents, who avoided so blatantly blurring the lines be- tween official actions and political activity. And Mr. Trump’s declara- tion that “we welcome five abso- lutely incredible new members into our great American family” stands in stark contrast to his anti- immigrant policies, often fueled by xenophobic language. His decision to preside over the naturalization ceremony ap- peared aimed at suburbanites, people of color and women put off by his usually strident talk. Ms. Awadelseid, 66, a substitute teacher who works with Sudanese children in her suburban Virginia community, said in an interview that “it is hard for my country” to be subject to travel restrictions but that it was an honor to visit the A ‘Welcome,’ After 3 Years Of ‘Stay Out’ By ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A12 John Geraghty, a 41-year-old worker in a tractor factory, has barely paid attention to the presi- dential race or the conventions. Every day he focuses on survival: getting his son to sports practice, working at his job where he now wears a mask, and getting home to sleep, only to start over again the next day. But when he woke up on Mon- day morning to images of his hometown, Kenosha, Wis., in flames, he could not stop watch- ing. The unrest in faraway places like Portland, Ore., and Minneapo- lis had arrived at his doorstep, af- ter a white police officer on Sun- day shot a Black man in the back multiple times. And after feeling “100 percent on the fence” about who he will vote for in November, he is increasingly nervous that Democratic state leaders seem unable to contain the spiraling cri- sis. “It’s crazy that it’s now happen- ing in my home city,” he said. “We have to have a serious conversa- tion about what are we going to do about it. It doesn’t seem like the powers that be want to do much.” The politically calculated warn- ings of President Trump and the Republican Party about chaos en- veloping America should Demo- crats win in November are rever- berating among some people in Kenosha, a small city in the south- east corner of one of the most criti- cal states in this election, where protests have raged for a number of increasingly combustible nights. While many demonstrators have been peaceful, others have set fire to buildings. At least four businesses downtown have been looted. Men armed with guns have shown up to confront pro- testers, leading to the shooting of three people, two of them fatally. On Wednesday, a white teenager from across the state line in Illi- nois was arrested in connection to the shooting, and Mr. Trump vowed to send in federal law en- forcement and additional Na- tional Guard troops. In Kenosha County, where the president won by fewer than 250 votes in 2016, those who already supported Mr. Trump said in inter- views that the events of the past G.O.P. Warnings of Chaos Resound in Wisconsin By SABRINA TAVERNISE and ELLEN ALMER DURSTON Fires and Looting Push Some in Swing State Closer to Trump Protesters confronting the police on Tuesday in Kenosha, Wis., after the shooting of Jacob Blake. ALYSSA SCHUKAR FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A18 A stylish utility vest. Leggings. A denim jacket. And pockets for a big iPhone. For the first time in decades, scouts have new uniforms and separates, designed by Fashion Institute of Technology students. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 Girl Scouts Get A Fresh Look Arrests swept up Ted Hui, a lawmaker, as officials tried to polish their image amid a clampdown on dissent. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A8-10 Hong Kong’s Push for Control The M.T.A. said it would have to cut bus and subway service by 40 percent with- out $12 billion in federal aid. PAGE A4 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-7 Doomsday Subway Warning Pandemic, social distancing, wildfire, destruction — a photograph evoking 2020’s trauma went viral. But Lake Berryessa, Calif., lived it. PAGE A19 NATIONAL A19-23 Where the Traumas Converged A New Jersey plan would set aside money at birth for most children, giving them a lift when they turn 18. PAGE A19 $1,000 Boost for Babies Community transmission led Hamas, the militant group that rules the terri- tory, to impose a curfew. PAGE A7 Gaza Finds First Local Cases The Federal Reserve’s loftiest annual meeting will be webcast on Thursday, allowing the public to watch. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-5 The Fed on Your Computer Nicholas Kristof PAGE A26 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 Stand Up NY is staging dozens of out- door shows a week across the city. The performances, though technically unau- thorized, raise the stakes for comedians and audiences alike. PAGE C1 Comedy in Parks, Not Clubs The CreateNYC program increased funding for smaller neighborhood arts organizations but never required insti- tutions to disclose demographic data that would measure the results. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Cloudy Progress on Diversity This week’s one-two punch of Hurricane Laura and Tropical Storm Marco may be extraordi- nary, but the storms are just two of nine to strike Texas and Louisiana since 2017 alone, helping to drive a major federal change in how the nation handles floods. For years, even as seas rose and flooding worsened nationwide, policymakers stuck to the belief that relocating entire communi- ties away from vulnerable areas was too extreme to consider, an at- tack on Americans’ love of home and private property as well as a costly use of taxpayer dollars. Now, that is rapidly changing amid acceptance that rebuilding over and over after successive floods makes little sense. The shift threatens to uproot people not only on the coasts but in flood-prone areas nationwide, potentially exacerbating racial in- equality while making the conse- quences of climate change even more painful for cities and towns already squeezed financially. This month, the Federal Emer- gency Management Agency de- tailed a new program, worth an initial $500 million, with billions more to come, designed to pay for large-scale relocation nationwide. Flood-Prone Communities Retreat to Drier Land By CHRISTOPHER FLAVELLE Continued on Page A22 Sea Rising, U.S. Sours on Rebuild-in-Place Republicans used the third night of their convention on Wednesday to amplify warnings of violence and lawlessness under Democratic leadership, trying to capitalize on the worsening unrest in Wisconsin to reclaim moderate voters who might be reluctant to hand President Trump a second term. The party also made appeals to social conservatives with attacks on abortion and accusations that the Democrats and their nominee, Joseph R. Biden Jr., were “Catho- lics in name only.” And they inten- sified their effort to lift Mr. Trump’s standing among women with testimonials vouching for him as empathetic and as a cham- pion of women in the workplace — from women who work for him, a number of female lawmakers and his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump. Speaking hours after Gov. Tony Evers of Wisconsin called in the National Guard to restore order to Kenosha, Wis., where a police offi- cer shot a Black man this week, numerous Republicans led by Vice President Mike Pence as- sailed Mr. Biden for what they claimed was his tolerance of the vandalism that has grown out of racial justice protests, claiming the country would not be safe with him as president. “Last week, Joe Biden didn’t say one word about the violence and chaos engulfing cities across this country,” said Mr. Pence, standing before an array of Amer- ican flags at Fort McHenry in Bal- timore and vowing: “We will have law and order on the streets of this country for every American of ev- ery race and creed and color.” Gov. Kristi Noem of South Da- kota said that places like Seattle, Portland and other Democrat-run cities are being “overrun by vio- lent mobs.” She likened the vio- lence to the lead-up of the Civil War and asserted that residents “are left to fend for themselves.” Ms. Noem invoked a young Abraham Lincoln, claiming he had been “alarmed by the disre- gard for the rule of law throughout the country.’’ “He was concerned for the peo- ple that had seen their property destroyed, their families attacked and their lives threatened or even taken away,” she said, adding “Sound familiar?” The intense focus on the rioting amounted to an acknowledgment by Republicans that they must re- frame the election to make urban unrest central and shift attention away from the deaths and ill- nesses of millions of people from the coronavirus. Skirting the most complex and trying issues of the pandemic, Mr. Pence, calling America “a nation of miracles,” teased the prospect of a vaccine in REPUBLICANS USE LAW AND ORDER AS RALLYING CRY A U.S. ‘OVERRUN’ BY MOBS Attacks on Biden Over Issues of Religion and National Security By JONATHAN MARTIN and ALEXANDER BURNS Continued on Page A15 Vice President Mike Pence, in his convention speech in Baltimore on Wednesday night, accused Democrats of tolerating violence. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES REFUSAL TO PLAY Athletes across sports raised the stakes of a social justice movement. PAGE B9 A judge sent Brenton Tarrant to prison for life for killing 51 people at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. PAGE A10 Punishment for a Massacre Late Edition VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,798 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 2020 Today, warm, thunderstorms, windy hail, high 90. Tonight, thunder- storms, warm, humid, low 74. To- morrow, warm and humid, high 87. Weather map appears on Page B6. $3.00

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Page 1: AS KENOSHA BOILS POLICE SHOOTING U.S. INVESTIGATES AS RALLYING CRY … · 1 hour ago · major federal change in how the nation handles floods. For years, even as seas rose and flooding

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-08-27,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+%!\![!$!"

WASHINGTON — Trump ad-ministration officials on Wednes-day defended a new recommenda-tion that people without Covid-19symptoms abstain from testing,even as scientists warned that thepolicy could hobble an alreadyweak federal response as schoolsreopen and a potential autumnwave looms.

The day after the Centers forDisease Control and Preventionissued the revised guidance, there

were conflicting reports on whowas responsible. Two federalhealth officials said the shift cameas a directive to the Atlanta-basedC.D.C. from higher-ups in Wash-ington at the White House and theDepartment of Health and HumanServices.

Adm. Brett P. Giroir, the admin-istration’s coronavirus testingczar, called it a “C.D.C. action,”written with input from the agen-cy’s director, Dr. Robert R. Red-field. But he acknowledged thatthe revision came after a vigorousdebate among members of theWhite House coronavirus taskforce — including its newest mem-ber, Dr. Scott W. Atlas, a frequentFox News guest and a special ad-viser to President Trump.

“We all signed off on it, the docs,

Questions Swirl Around C.D.C.’s Shift on TestingBy SHERYL GAY STOLBERG Finger-Pointing on Who

Made the Decision

Continued on Page A6

KENOSHA, Wis. — The JusticeDepartment on Wednesday an-nounced a civil rights investiga-tion into the police shooting of aBlack man in Kenosha, Wis., asnew details emerged in the case, awhite teenager who confronteddemonstrators was arrested inconnection with two deaths, andprotests spread to athletes inthree pro sports leagues.

Protesters have poured into Ke-nosha’s streets to decry the shoot-ing of Jacob Blake, a Black fatherwho was partially paralyzed aftera white officer fired at him in frontof his children. The authorities re-leased new details of the case onWednesday that gave a clearerpicture of why police officers con-fronted Mr. Blake, who they saidhad a knife.

Amid the ire over the shootingof Mr. Blake, some in Kenoshahave torched buildings, and theauthorities have fired tear gas inan effort to clear the streets. Coun-terprotesters have also emerged,and gunfire broke out along onecrowded, dark street late Tuesday,sending bystanders fleeing intoparking lots and screaming in ter-ror.

The violence that broke outcame as demonstrators scuffledwith a group of men carrying longguns who said they were protect-ing the area from looting. The au-thorities were investigatingwhether the white teenager whowas arrested on Wednesday, iden-tified as Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, waspart of a vigilante group. His so-cial media accounts appeared toshow an intense affinity for guns,law enforcement and PresidentTrump.

The fatal shooting followed atense night of standoffs betweenthe police and demonstrators andescalated a situation that haddrawn the attention of Mr. Trump,who is in the third day of the Re-publican National Convention andhas sought to portray Democraticcities as rife with violence andcrime. Protests over the shootingof Mr. Blake also expanded tosports, where the N.B.A. post-poned multiple playoff games onWednesday after the MilwaukeeBucks boycotted their matchupwith the Orlando Magic.

Mr. Rittenhouse was arrested inAntioch, Ill., and faces a charge offirst-degree intentional homicide,according to a court documentfrom Lake County, Ill. Antioch isabout 30 minutes southwest of Ke-nosha, just over the Illinois line.Two men, a 26-year-old and a 36-year-old from Kenosha County

U.S. INVESTIGATESPOLICE SHOOTINGAS KENOSHA BOILS

NEW DETAILS RELEASED

Teenager Is Arrested inDeaths of Protesters

in Blake Case

By JULIE BOSMANand SARAH MERVOSH

Continued on Page A18

WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump moved within weeks oftaking office to prohibit immi-grants from Sudan from enteringthe United States, citing terrorismthreats and including it in his trav-el ban on some predominantlyMuslim countries — restrictionsthat remain partly in place today.

But on Tuesday, when Mr.Trump wanted to portray himselfas pro-immigrant, he invitedNeimat Abdelazim Awadelseid, aSudanese woman who had justqualified to become a U.S. citizen,and four others to a White Housenaturalization ceremony that hisre-election campaign featuredprominently during the Republi-can National Convention.

The president’s willingness touse the trappings of presidentialpower during a campaign conven-tion was a striking departure fromprevious presidents, who avoidedso blatantly blurring the lines be-tween official actions and politicalactivity. And Mr. Trump’s declara-tion that “we welcome five abso-lutely incredible new membersinto our great American family”stands in stark contrast to his anti-immigrant policies, often fueledby xenophobic language.

His decision to preside over thenaturalization ceremony ap-peared aimed at suburbanites,people of color and women put offby his usually strident talk.

Ms. Awadelseid, 66, a substituteteacher who works with Sudanesechildren in her suburban Virginiacommunity, said in an interviewthat “it is hard for my country” tobe subject to travel restrictionsbut that it was an honor to visit the

A ‘Welcome,’After 3 Years

Of ‘Stay Out’

By ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGSand MICHAEL D. SHEAR

Continued on Page A12

John Geraghty, a 41-year-oldworker in a tractor factory, hasbarely paid attention to the presi-dential race or the conventions.Every day he focuses on survival:getting his son to sports practice,working at his job where he nowwears a mask, and getting hometo sleep, only to start over againthe next day.

But when he woke up on Mon-day morning to images of hishometown, Kenosha, Wis., inflames, he could not stop watch-ing. The unrest in faraway placeslike Portland, Ore., and Minneapo-lis had arrived at his doorstep, af-ter a white police officer on Sun-day shot a Black man in the backmultiple times. And after feeling“100 percent on the fence” aboutwho he will vote for in November,

he is increasingly nervous thatDemocratic state leaders seemunable to contain the spiraling cri-sis.

“It’s crazy that it’s now happen-ing in my home city,” he said. “Wehave to have a serious conversa-tion about what are we going to doabout it. It doesn’t seem like thepowers that be want to do much.”

The politically calculated warn-ings of President Trump and theRepublican Party about chaos en-veloping America should Demo-crats win in November are rever-berating among some people inKenosha, a small city in the south-

east corner of one of the most criti-cal states in this election, whereprotests have raged for a numberof increasingly combustiblenights.

While many demonstratorshave been peaceful, others haveset fire to buildings. At least fourbusinesses downtown have beenlooted. Men armed with gunshave shown up to confront pro-testers, leading to the shooting ofthree people, two of them fatally.On Wednesday, a white teenagerfrom across the state line in Illi-nois was arrested in connection tothe shooting, and Mr. Trumpvowed to send in federal law en-forcement and additional Na-tional Guard troops.

In Kenosha County, where thepresident won by fewer than 250votes in 2016, those who alreadysupported Mr. Trump said in inter-views that the events of the past

G.O.P. Warnings of Chaos Resound in WisconsinBy SABRINA TAVERNISE

and ELLEN ALMER DURSTONFires and Looting Push

Some in Swing StateCloser to Trump

Protesters confronting the police on Tuesday in Kenosha, Wis., after the shooting of Jacob Blake.ALYSSA SCHUKAR FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A18

A stylish utility vest.Leggings. A denimjacket. And pocketsfor a big iPhone. Forthe first time indecades, scouts havenew uniforms andseparates, designedby Fashion Institute ofTechnology students. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

Girl Scouts GetA Fresh Look

Arrests swept up Ted Hui, a lawmaker,as officials tried to polish their imageamid a clampdown on dissent. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A8-10

Hong Kong’s Push for ControlThe M.T.A. said it would have to cut busand subway service by 40 percent with-out $12 billion in federal aid. PAGE A4

TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-7

Doomsday Subway Warning

Pandemic, social distancing, wildfire,destruction — a photograph evoking2020’s trauma went viral. But LakeBerryessa, Calif., lived it. PAGE A19

NATIONAL A19-23

Where the Traumas Converged

A New Jersey plan would set asidemoney at birth for most children, givingthem a lift when they turn 18. PAGE A19

$1,000 Boost for Babies

Community transmission led Hamas,the militant group that rules the terri-tory, to impose a curfew. PAGE A7

Gaza Finds First Local CasesThe Federal Reserve’s loftiest annualmeeting will be webcast on Thursday,allowing the public to watch. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-5

The Fed on Your Computer

Nicholas Kristof PAGE A26

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27

Stand Up NY is staging dozens of out-door shows a week across the city. Theperformances, though technically unau-thorized, raise the stakes for comediansand audiences alike. PAGE C1

Comedy in Parks, Not Clubs

The CreateNYC program increasedfunding for smaller neighborhood artsorganizations but never required insti-tutions to disclose demographic datathat would measure the results. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Cloudy Progress on Diversity

This week’s one-two punch ofHurricane Laura and TropicalStorm Marco may be extraordi-nary, but the storms are just two ofnine to strike Texas and Louisianasince 2017 alone, helping to drive amajor federal change in how thenation handles floods.

For years, even as seas rose andflooding worsened nationwide,policymakers stuck to the beliefthat relocating entire communi-ties away from vulnerable areas

was too extreme to consider, an at-tack on Americans’ love of homeand private property as well as acostly use of taxpayer dollars.Now, that is rapidly changingamid acceptance that rebuildingover and over after successivefloods makes little sense.

The shift threatens to uprootpeople not only on the coasts butin flood-prone areas nationwide,potentially exacerbating racial in-equality while making the conse-quences of climate change evenmore painful for cities and townsalready squeezed financially.

This month, the Federal Emer-gency Management Agency de-tailed a new program, worth aninitial $500 million, with billionsmore to come, designed to pay forlarge-scale relocation nationwide.

Flood-Prone Communities Retreat to Drier LandBy CHRISTOPHER FLAVELLE

Continued on Page A22

Sea Rising, U.S. Sourson Rebuild-in-Place

Republicans used the thirdnight of their convention onWednesday to amplify warningsof violence and lawlessness underDemocratic leadership, trying tocapitalize on the worsening unrestin Wisconsin to reclaim moderatevoters who might be reluctant tohand President Trump a secondterm.

The party also made appeals tosocial conservatives with attackson abortion and accusations thatthe Democrats and their nominee,Joseph R. Biden Jr., were “Catho-lics in name only.” And they inten-sified their effort to lift Mr.Trump’s standing among womenwith testimonials vouching forhim as empathetic and as a cham-pion of women in the workplace —from women who work for him, anumber of female lawmakers andhis daughter-in-law, Lara Trump.

Speaking hours after Gov. TonyEvers of Wisconsin called in theNational Guard to restore order toKenosha, Wis., where a police offi-cer shot a Black man this week,numerous Republicans led byVice President Mike Pence as-sailed Mr. Biden for what theyclaimed was his tolerance of thevandalism that has grown out ofracial justice protests, claimingthe country would not be safe withhim as president.

“Last week, Joe Biden didn’tsay one word about the violenceand chaos engulfing cities acrossthis country,” said Mr. Pence,standing before an array of Amer-ican flags at Fort McHenry in Bal-timore and vowing: “We will havelaw and order on the streets of thiscountry for every American of ev-ery race and creed and color.”

Gov. Kristi Noem of South Da-kota said that places like Seattle,Portland and other Democrat-runcities are being “overrun by vio-lent mobs.” She likened the vio-lence to the lead-up of the CivilWar and asserted that residents“are left to fend for themselves.”

Ms. Noem invoked a youngAbraham Lincoln, claiming hehad been “alarmed by the disre-gard for the rule of law throughoutthe country.’’

“He was concerned for the peo-ple that had seen their propertydestroyed, their families attackedand their lives threatened or eventaken away,” she said, adding“Sound familiar?”

The intense focus on the riotingamounted to an acknowledgmentby Republicans that they must re-frame the election to make urbanunrest central and shift attentionaway from the deaths and ill-nesses of millions of people fromthe coronavirus. Skirting the mostcomplex and trying issues of thepandemic, Mr. Pence, callingAmerica “a nation of miracles,”teased the prospect of a vaccine in

REPUBLICANS USELAW AND ORDERAS RALLYING CRY

A U.S. ‘OVERRUN’ BY MOBS

Attacks on Biden OverIssues of Religion and

National Security

By JONATHAN MARTINand ALEXANDER BURNS

Continued on Page A15

Vice President Mike Pence, in his convention speech in Baltimore on Wednesday night, accused Democrats of tolerating violence.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

REFUSAL TO PLAY Athletes acrosssports raised the stakes of a socialjustice movement. PAGE B9

A judge sent Brenton Tarrant to prisonfor life for killing 51 people at mosquesin Christchurch, New Zealand. PAGE A10

Punishment for a Massacre

Late Edition

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,798 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 2020

Today, warm, thunderstorms, windyhail, high 90. Tonight, thunder-storms, warm, humid, low 74. To-morrow, warm and humid, high 87.Weather map appears on Page B6.

$3.00