Two men in Florida that took part in antigovernment demonstrations for Cuba are being held on unlawful assembly charges for blocking streets or sidewalks as part of the state’s new anti-riot law.
Supporters of antigovernment protests in Cuba gathered in Tampa Tuesday night to take over an exit ramp at Interstate 275 and Dale Mabry Highway where Julian Rodriguez-Rodriguez, 30, Maikel Vazquez-Pico, 39, and others were arrested, the Associated Press reported. Earlier this year, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a riot law in which certain provisions make it a felony to block some roadways. Other rioting penalties include heightened punishments for protesters who get violent.
“The Governor does not tell law enforcement how to do their day to day jobs. However, it should go without saying that anyone who breaks the law is subject to arrest,” DeSantis spokesperson Christina Pushaw told the AP.
Rodriguez-Rodriguez and Maikel Vazquez-Pico were also arrested for charges that include battery of a law enforcement officer and resisting law enforcement. They are both being held in the Hillsborough County Jail without bond as of Thursday.
For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below:
Octavio Jones/Getty Images
Interstate 275 and Dale Mabry Highway is a major thoroughfare in Tampa.
The new law creates new criminal penalties for those who organize demonstrations that get out of hand. Provisions of the law also give immunity to people who drive through protesters blocking a road.
The bill was introduced after last summer’s protests for racial justice during which some Black Lives Matter protesters were met by police with tear gas and arrests when they took to the streets for days at a time.
A third man, 34-year-old Evelio Ramirez-Carrasco of Tampa, also was arrested on charges of unlawful assembly and resisting a law enforcement officer without violence—both misdemeanors—in connection with the protests. Ramirez-Carrasco was given a notice to appear in court, records show.
He qualified for a notice to appear because of his charges but the other two men did not, the Tampa Bay Times reported.
Protesters blocked the Palmetto Expressway near Hialeah for about 30 minutes Wednesday night, news outlets reported. On Tuesday, they blocked the same highway for hours during the rainy rush hour.
During a roundtable about Cuba in Miami on Tuesday, DeSantis said the demonstrations in South Florida, and other parts of the state, were “fundamentally different than what we saw last summer.”
Pushaw, said he had signed the “anti-riot” law to empower law enforcement to protect and serve the people of Florida. In an email to the Associated Press, she pushed back against assertions that political ideology could create inequities in the application of the law and the Republican governor would have a hand in deciding which protesters or causes would be subject to the new law.
“It is not the Governor’s job to arrest or decline to arrest any citizen for any reason; that is the responsibility of law enforcement in each jurisdiction,” she said.
Pushaw pointed out that blocking roadways without a permit was illegal long before the new law, and law enforcement agencies across the state have discretion to enforce the law in a way to ensure public safety.
In Tampa on Tuesday evening, police used a public address system to order the crowds to disperse. About 45 minutes later, Vazquez-Pico and Rodriguez-Rodriguez tried to walk onto the interstate from entrance ramp, according to the arrest report.
Rodriguez-Rodriguez put an officer into a bear hug as the officer was trying to arrest another protester, according to an arrest report. He then punched an officer in the face, breaking his glasses as the officer tried to arrest him, the report said. He continued to resist arrest until he was placed in handcuffs.
It was not immediately known whether the two men have lawyers who can speak on their behalf.