This Article is From Nov 03, 2016

Church Defaced By Donald Trump Graffiti Was Destroyed By Arson: Officials

Church Defaced By Donald Trump Graffiti Was Destroyed By Arson: Officials

A 'Vote Trump' graffiti was done on the exterior of an an African-American church in Mississippi (AP)

Miami: Arson was blamed Wednesday for a blaze that destroyed an African-American church in Mississippi where a slogan for Donald Trump had been spray-painted on the exterior.

A person of interest was being interrogated, officials said, after the historically black Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church in Greenville, a city of 35,000 people, burned Tuesday night.

"The church was vandalized with the words 'Vote Trump' on the side," said mayor Errick Simmons at a press conference, describing the blaze as "a hateful and cowardly act."

Fire officials said the century-old church was fully engulfed in flames, and sustained heavy heat, smoke and water damage, according to Greenville fire chief Ruben Brown, Sr.
 

Burned pews, destroyed musical instruments, Bibles are part of the debris inside the Church in Greenville


"The fire was intentionally set," Brown told AFP.

An investigation into the fire as a possible hate crime was under way by local, state and federal officials.

"This matter is a direct assault on people's right to freely worship," said Simmons.

 Police chief Delando Wilson said investigators are "currently interviewing one person of interest," to see if he had any involvement.

Wilson declined to give any further details in order to preserve the integrity of the investigation.

"We are still in the preliminary stages to try and determine the motive of this crime," Wilson added.

"We want to investigate every angle to determine why this act was committed."

Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, described the church as "a cornerstone of this majority-Black community located in the heart of the Mississippi Delta."

ATF agents gather outside the fire damaged Hopewell M.B. Baptist Church in Greenville

She also expressed concern that the church was vandalized so close to the November 8 presidential election.

"The toxic rhetoric of this election cycle continues to cast a dark cloud over this election cycle," Clarke said.

A crowdfunding drive on the Gofundme platform aiming to raise $10,000 to restore the church had attracted more than $115,000 by Wednesday evening.
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