Colorado Cops Arrest Mom For Confederate Flag Arson

Chris Keane/Reuters
Chris Keane/​Reuters

COLORADO SPRINGS — It was an hour before mid­night on July 22 when a cop knocked on the door of local Black Lives Matter activist Patricia Cameron. She was asleep at home with her 8‑year-old son. The offi­cer called out her name and asked her to come out­side. Cameron was­n’t dressed, so the cop told her to put on some clothes— he had some­thing for her to sign.

For the past four years Cameron has lived in the small, hip­py-dip­py moun­tain town of Manitou Springs just out­side Colorado’s sec­ond largest city. She’s a vocal pres­ence in the local media and runs a blog and a Twitter feed where she dis­cuss­es top­ics she feels get ignored in Colorado Springs, a very white, heav­i­ly Republican Christian-con­ser­v­a­tive mil­i­tary city. As a young black woman, she says her encoun­ters with police in the area haven’t always gone well. She’s filed at least one com­plaint against offi­cers here.

I was pet­ri­fied,” she says when she found a uni­formed cop at her door at 11:00 at night. The name of Sandra Bland, a young black woman who was found dead July 13, hang­ing from a trash bag noose in a Texas jail cell days after a traf­fic stop, flashed through her mind. In the hall­way of Cameron’s apart­ment build­ing, the offi­cer told her he was there to serve her with some­thing, and hand­ed her what looked like a tick­et. He asked her to sign it, say­ing it had to do with an inci­dent on July 4. The doc­u­ment was an arrest sum­mons accus­ing her of fourth degree arson.

I def­i­nite­ly think they were try­ing to intim­i­date me.”
Two weeks pri­or, the sin­gle mom, local polit­i­cal activist and EMT had orga­nized an Independence Day pub­lic burn­ing of a Confederate flag in a local park as a form of peace­ful protest. Online, pho­tos had been spread­ing of accused killer Dylan Roof pos­ing with Confederate flags before police say he car­ried out his attack on nine black parish­ioners in a Charleston, SC church. In announc­ing her plans days before the event, Cameron told a local alt-week­ly reporter the demon­stra­tion was “sim­ply us get­ting togeth­er and reit­er­at­ing the fact that black lives in fact mat­ter.” She’d alert­ed the local police depart­ment about what she’d planned to do, tag­ging them in a post on Facebook, though a police spokesper­son says the depart­ment nev­er saw it. The police chief had also got­ten an anony­mous e‑mail about the event. (Weeks pri­or, the coun­ty sher­if­f’s office had been on alert when a local bik­er club held a pig roast to protest the Islamic hol­i­day of Ramadan.)

Not many peo­ple showed up on the day Cameron and a hand­ful of oth­ers held their flag burn­ing under a park pavil­ion that does­n’t allow bar­be­cu­ing. There, she squirt­ed lighter flu­id on a large Confederate flag, some­one else lit it, and a third man held the pole as the flag burned on a char­coal grill. With an American flag ban­dana cov­er­ing her nose and mouth, Cameron clapped as oth­ers waved signs read­ing “Black Lives Matter” and “Who is burn­ing black church­es?” The local paper dis­patched a sum­mer intern to the scene. A video went up on YouTube. Some local TV sta­tions car­ried the news.

Now, near­ly three weeks lat­er, an offi­cer was stand­ing in Cameron’s hall­way ask­ing her to sign an arrest sum­mons that accused her of arson. She was not for­mal­ly arrest­ed and tak­en to jail. “I was con­fused,” she says about how it all went down, espe­cial­ly so late at night— and so long after the very pub­lic incident.
Manitou Springs Police spokes­woman Odette Saglimbeni says an offi­cer show­ing up late at night to issue an arrest sum­mons isn’t com­mon for the department.

It sort of hap­pened to be that time of night when it hap­pened,” she told The Daily Beast about Cameron’s late-night wake-up call. Officers, she said, might have been pre­oc­cu­pied dur­ing the rest of the day with oth­er duties. “They were just not able to get out there until that time.”

As for why it took near­ly 20 days for the cops to con­tact Cameron, Saglimbeni said the police had con­duct­ed a “pret­ty exten­sive inves­ti­ga­tion” after see­ing video of the flag burn­ing. While offi­cers might have known the demon­stra­tion was hap­pen­ing that day, a large struc­ture fire near­by attract­ed their atten­tion, and no police were at the park when the flag went up in flames. Trying to iden­ti­fy all the peo­ple involved also took time, she said, and the police want­ed to make sure they had every­thing in order.

Under state law, fourth degree arson in Colorado is when “a per­son who know­ing­ly or reck­less­ly starts or main­tains a fire or caus­es an explo­sion, on his own prop­er­ty or that of anoth­er, and by so doing places anoth­er in dan­ger of death or seri­ous bod­i­ly injury or places any build­ing or occu­pied struc­ture of anoth­er in dan­ger of damage.”

The charge can be a felony or a mis­de­meanor; Cameron was charged with the later.

The sit­u­a­tion posed a risk of dan­ger to the prop­er­ty and cit­i­zens of Manitou Springs, as there were mul­ti­ple peo­ple in the area,” reads a July 22 news release from the Manitou Springs Police Department. The release states the depart­ment “strong­ly sup­ports cit­i­zens who wish to employ their first amend­ment rights,” but “would urge those who employ those rights, to do so in a safe manner.”

Cameron’s arrest “has noth­ing to do with what what­ev­er it was she was try­ing to get across,” Saglimbeni said. “We’re just look­ing at the safe­ty of any­one around there, and city prop­er­ty as well. Those flames got pret­ty big pret­ty quick.”

For her part, Cameron has left town for a stint after what she called “neg­a­tive atten­tion” fol­low­ing her arrest. She isn’t com­ment­ing on her involve­ment with the flag burn­ing, but she spoke with The Daily Beast about the way her local police con­duct­ed her late-night arrest.

It freaks me out that they can show up late at night out­side my house,” she says. “I kind of felt like … in this day in age, and the atten­tion on all cops, you might want to mind your Ps and Qs when it comes to your inter­ac­tions with the public.”

I def­i­nite­ly think they were try­ing to intim­i­date me,” she said. Read more here: Colorado Cops Arrest Mom for Confederate Flag Arson