National Guard pilot grounded amid probe into helicopter flying over DC protesters

Source: The Hill | June 6, 2020 | Kaelan Deese

The Department of Defense said Friday it had grounded one of the National Guard helicopter pilots who performed low-flying maneuvers to disperse crowds of protesters in Washington, D.C., on Monday evening, according to multiple reports.

Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy told reporters that the helicopter crew was grounded pending results from an internal investigation, according to local CBS affiliate WUSA9. A Pentagon spokesman told the outlet that the move was standard procedure during such investigations.

The aircraft was one of two Army National Guard helicopters that hovered between 100 and 300 feet above the streets of the District on Monday night, according to an aircraft tracker. Gusts from their helicopter blades were aimed at dispersing crowds of protesters.

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The New York Times reported Saturday that top Pentagon officials ordered the Guard pilots to perform the low-flying maneuver called “persistent presence.” The paper said McCarthy was one of the officials who authorized a portion of the planning for the helicopters’ operations on Monday.

Eyewitnesses on the scene said the force of the helicopters’ rotor blades caused debris to stir in the streets, even causing some tree limbs to break and nearly hit bystanders, according to the Times.

Videos circulated on social media showed red and white cross markings on an unarmed Lakota aircraft, indicating its affiliation with medical responses.

Human Rights Watch said in a report that “the emblem is a universally recognized symbol of medical aid and is protected under the Geneva Conventions.”

“Its misuse is prohibited under the conventions and it has no place in a ‘show of force’ or to forcibly disperse protesters,” the organization said.

President Trump ordered the activation of the D.C. National Guard to quell protesters amid ongoing demonstrations in the city, and the Guard previously said it was considering the use of a UH-72 medical evacuation helicopter in the Joint Task Force D.C. operation, WUSA9 noted.

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