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Alabama man arrested after shouting 'womp womp' and pulling gun on immigration protesters

Ryan Sealy also holds sign above his head which says "ICE ICE Baby" 

Avi Selk
Tuesday 03 July 2018 06:05 EDT
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Alabama man arrested after shouting 'womp womp' and pulling gun on immigration protesters

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The gathering at a park gazebo in Huntsville, Alabama, was by no means the largest of Saturday's nationwide protests against President Donald Trump's "zero tolerance" border policies, though it was memorable for other reasons.

It began around noon, as an Episcopalian priest delivered a prayer to about 100 protesters gathered around the gazebo and a man marched back and forth in front of her, shouting "womp womp!"

"Holy and ever-loving God ..." said the priest, Kerry Holder-Joffrion.

"Womp womp!" the man said.

"We pray for the children of this nation and all nations ... Womp womp!"

The man was obviously parroting former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, who had uttered the same sound on Fox News several days earlier, during a discussion about migrant children being seized from their parents at the border.

Mr Lewandowski's sarcastic "womp womp" revolted many people - but also apparently inspired a certain segment of Trump's supporters, as the people at Big Spring Park were now discovering.

"We offer your love to all of our children ..." Ms Holder-Joffrion continued.

"Womp womp!"

This was not the man's only message. He held a sign above his head on which he'd written "ICE ICE Baby," and he occasionally shout-sang the notes of a pop song by the same name over the prayer.

The man also had a handgun tucked in his cargo pants, according to police.

After he had disrupted the first half of Ms Holder-Joffrion's prayer, a few protesters began drifting away from the audience to confront the man. A woman paced backward in front of him, holding her own sign in his face as he marched forward - "Super Callous Racist Fascist Sexist Braggadocious."

"Where are your ancestors from?" someone asked the man.

"Alabama!" he answered.

Ms Holder-Joffrion said she felt her stomach tighten but made up her mind to finish the prayer.

"I didn't open my eyes, so that I could stay focused," she told The Washington Post. "My voice gained volume as it became more chaotic."

In fact, she nearly shouted her remaining verses, cheered on by the crowd while the man continued to shout in the background.

"We ask that you give us the strength in the face of the opposition not to hate, but to love," Ms Holder-Joffrion said, the lines coming to her in the moment. "Prayer is stronger than hatred!"

It was around this point that the gun came out.

A Huntsville Police Department spokesman said the man - 34-year-old Shane Ryan Sealy - pushed one of the protesters, who pushed him back and knocked him to the ground, at which point Mr Sealy allegedly produced the weapon.

Though Ms Holder-Joffrion still had her eyes closed, she said her husband (Democratic congressional candidate Peter Joffrion) didn't see a scuffle - just a protester telling Mr Sealy to "leave, leave, leave, leave".

In any case, the weapon came out of the waistband.

"Gun, gun, gun, gun!" someone shouted in video published by WAFF 48 - just as Ms Holder-Joffrion was praying for the nation's strength.

Panicked shouts drowned her out, and the camera turned from the priest to Mr Sealy, about 15 feet from the gazebo, brandishing what appeared to be a pistol at the crowd.

Most people dropped. "I got down on my face on the other side of the gazebo right here and just cried, I was so in shock," rally organiser Ava Caldwell told WBTV.

But several protesters remained upright - one man pointed directly at Mr Sealy, shouting warnings that the man was armed.

Ms Holder-Joffrion said she remained standing under the gazebo, eyes still shut in concentration, determined to finish her prayer no matter what happened.

The video shows Mr Sealy putting the gun back in his waistband and backing away from the crowd, before turning around and walking quickly in the opposite direction.

Of the few protesters who followed him, most did so with obvious caution - one man still holding his "Brown People Are Still People" sign as he watched Mr Sealy go.

But a white-haired man nearly sprinted in pursuit, tossing his cap to the ground as he chased Mr Sealy towards the treeline.

Mr Sealy did not make it that far. A police cruiser soon rolled across the grass to meet him, and then second car approached from his left.

He put his hands up, still holding his "ICE ICE Baby" sign. A former high school teacher, according to AL.com, he was initially arrested for possessing a gun within 1,000 feet of a protest. But he would later be booked into jail on misdemeanour charges of menacing and reckless endangerment.

Ms Holder-Joffrion had her eyes closed through most of the action. She said she remained under the gazebo, continuing her prayer through to "Amen."

When she finally opened her eyes, she looked across the park and saw about half a dozen police officers standing over Mr Sealy.

"I realised they'd been among us in the crowd all along," she said.

All around her, people were still shaking, crying and getting up from the ground. A young girl who had been scheduled to speak later in the rally was too traumatised to get the words out, Ms Holder-Joffrion said.

Still, the protest went on. Ms Holder-Joffrion said a pastor delivered a second prayer immediately after hers - this time in Spanish.

Washington Post

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