The Fayetteville ÒSucker
PuncherÕsÓ Last Stand
On Wednesday, December 14, the ÒTrump supporterÓ
who delivered an unsuspected Òsucker punch to the faceÓ of a ÒprotestorÓ being
led out of a Trump rally back in March finally had his day in court. Here is how The Washington Post reported it:
Man at Trump rally is sentenced to probation
John Franklin McGraw, who elbowed and threatened
a protester at a rally for then-presidential candidate Donald Trump earlier
this year, was sentenced to 12 months of probation Wednesday, resolving one of
the first violent clashes in a historically tense presidential campaign that
deepened racial and political divisions across the country.
McGrawÕs threats and assault of Rakeem Jones, 27, captured in a viral video, became a flash
point in the presidential campaign and focused attention on the raucous
atmosphere at Trump rallies. In the video, McGraw, 79, speculated whether Jones
was a member of a Òterrorist organizationÓ and wondered whether Ònext time, we
might have to kill him.Ó
McGraw pleaded no contest to charges of
misdemeanor assault and disorderly conduct. An additional misdemeanor charge of
communicating threats was dismissed. Although the case took on racial overtones
because McGraw is white and Jones is African American, McGrawÕs attorney, James
C. MacRae, said McGrawÕs actions were not motivated
by racial animosity.
ÒIÕm extremely sorry this happened,Ó McGraw told
Jones during a hearing in Cumberland County District Court in Fayetteville,
N.C. ÒI hate it worse than anything in the world.Ó
McGraw shook hands with Jones, and the pair
hugged as the courtroom erupted in applause.
ÒAs far as race, not one time throughout this
whole six months have I mentioned his race. I got hit by a man, period,Ó Jones
said. ÒAs far as race, I donÕt know. ItÕs not my concern. I got hit by a man.Ó
Up to the very last day before the November 8
presidential vote, Hillary ClintonÕs campaign in her commercials in the vital
swing state of North Carolina was continuing to show clips of 78-year-old John
Franklin McGraw Òsucker punchingÓ Rakeem Jones, the
Òprotester,Ó as Jones was being led out of a Donald Trump rally in Fayetteville
by sheriffÕs deputies. It took a
certain amount of brazenness on the part of HillaryÕs troops to continue to
publicize the faux violent encounter
after the revelations by the Project Veritas
organization that it was a common practice of operatives paid by
the Clinton campaign to pay people to be disruptive at TrumpÕs extraordinarily
popular rallies in order to foster altercations like the one that took
place in Fayetteville.
The Professional-Wrestling Punch
There was ample reason to be suspicious of what
transpired, as I wrote back on March 16:
Closer examination of the video reveals that the elderly, pony-tailed man
appears not to have punched the young black man in the face, at all. Rather, he struck him intentionally only
with his forearm in the upper part of the body near the younger manÕs
face. It looks like a glancing blow
administered for maximum show but to little effect, sort of like what we see in
professional wrestling matches. In
a related article The Post reveals that the older man, John McGraw, an Air Force
veteran, has been a Òcowboy actionÓ reenactor. A 2009 article from the mountain town
of Hendersonville, NC, about McGraw is still more revealing. We learn that he is an Air Force
veteran, that he had been a serious boxer in his youth, that he has deep and
old ties to Las Vegas, where he was a friend of Sammy Davis, Jr., among a
number of celebrities, and that at the time of the article he was still working
as a sham gunfighter in wild west reenactments. One can easily imagine that he has
engaged in sham fistfights as well for the entertainment of tourists.
All my focus at that time and in a follow-up article, however, was on the
Òattacker,Ó not just because of the apparent phoniness of his
all-show-and-no-blow Òsucker punchÓ (which The Post and all the media called it at the time, not an
ÒelbowÓ), but also because of the over-the-top, ridiculous nature of what he
said in quite measured tones to the on-the-spot reporter for Inside Edition in an interview after the
rally. In retrospect, it is clear
that we all should have been equally as suspicious of Rakeem
Jones, the Òprotester,Ó and his three accomplices.
Here we get to watch Lawrence OÕDonnell of MSNBC on the day
after it happened attempting to squeeze the last possible drop of anti-Trump
and anti-Trump-supporter sentiment out of the episode that he can as he
interviews Jones and Ronnie Rouse, who was with Jones at the event. Maybe my perception is now too much
colored by what we have learned about the Clinton camp paying people to disrupt
Trump rallies and provoke altercations, but of the three people we see, Jones
appears to me to be the least upset at what happened to him the night
before. He also strikes me as the
sort of person who is unlikely to have been so strongly motivated politically
that he would have chosen to produce the sort of public unpleasantry
that he did in the absence of some other inducement, say, like some handsome
financial compensation. Here we get a further impression of Jones from CBS
North Carolina as someone a bit more pleased with himself than upset at what
had transpired the night before.
Jones and his seemingly ill-suited
music-producer buddy
(or handler) Rouse were apparently so
pleased with how well things went at the March Trump rally that according to an
August 8, 2016, Fayetteville Observer article, they, unlike McGraw, were all set to attend
the next one that night in Fayetteville, this time with eight more people in
their group. Even JonesÕs lawyer
realized that that wouldnÕt look good when Jones is claiming Òthe effects of being assaulted have had an impact on him
mentally and physically.Ó
Lawyered Up
But
whatÕs this about JonesÕs lawyer, anyway?
Lawyers cost money. Rakeem Jones was never charged with anything, and with that
hug-and-make-up scene at McGrawÕs sentencing, I think we can safely say that no
civil suit is in the offing. I
think we might fairly ask who paid for that lawyer or, at least, where the
money came from to pay for him.
While
weÕre on the subject of lawyers and their costliness, when the story first
broke of McGrawÕs arrest we were told that he was being held in custody, unable
to ante up the rather modest sum of $2,500. ItÕs pretty clear that McGraw is not a
man of means. In a March 25, 2016, interview by
the Fayetteville Observer he says
that he doesnÕt even have a radio or a television. A photograph with the following caption
accompanies the article: ÒJohn McGraw stands outside his camper, where he lives
in Linden.Ó * From what you can see of the camper, it
looks like a very modest one. But
in the July 12 Fayetteville Observer
we find this explanation for why the trial canÕt take place in anything like a
timely matter:
Defense
lawyer James C. MacRae Jr. on June 30 requested the
delay on behalf of 79-year-old John Franklin McGraw.
"Attorney needs additional time to investigate case to
prepare his defense," McRae's filing says.
Could anyone possibly believe that
excuse? ItÕs a very simple case,
one for which a lawyer is hardly even needed. As we have said, lawyers cost money and
the longer the case is strung out the longer the lawyerÕs meter runs. ItÕs pretty clear that McGraw is not
rich enough and itÕs hard to believe that he is stupid enough to waste what
little money he has in that way.
Pre-Election Reality Show
The key words in the article, it
appears to me, are, Òuntil after the elections.Ó We can see from the little
love-fest that they performed at McGrawÕs trial that he and Jones were feeling
strain staying in character, one as a Trump-loving, racist hothead and the
other as a political zealot motivated to bait Trump supporters just for the fun
of it. But had the trial taken
place before the election that is what they likely would have had to do. One need look
no further than a McClatchy News Service piece that appeared in the Raleigh News and Observer (buried away on their web site. Apparently
nothing appeared about the trial in the print version of this newspaper that
dominates Eastern North Carolina.) to get an idea of McGrawÕs true nature:
Éon Wednesday, McGraw said he would have acted differently in
another setting.
ÒIf I met
you in the street and the same thing occurred, I would have said, 'Go on home.
One of us will get hurt,'Ó McGraw added, according to WRAL. ÒThat's what I would have
said. But we are caught up in a political mess today, and you and me, we got to
heal our country.Ó
McGraw then
shook hands with Jones, and the two hugged.
ÒIt just
felt good being able to shake his handÉand face him,Ó Jones said later, according to WNCN.
More accurately, McGraw might have said, ÒYou and me, we
needed the money.Ó
John Kerry received 1,525,844 votes in North Carolina in
2004 and lost badly to the incumbent George W. Bush. Just four years later Barack Obama got
2,142, 651 votes, an extraordinary 40% increase, and narrowly edged John McCain
in the state. There is little doubt
that many of those new Democratic voters came from an energized black populace,
and the same story played out in many other states like North Carolina with
large black populations. Democratic
strategists realized that with a candidate like Hillary Clinton there was a
real danger that black voters would fall back into the same slough of apathy
that contributed to KerryÕs defeat by a weak opponent. The attempt to paint Trump and his
supporters as anti-black racists was a reflection of the DemocratsÕ vital need
to get blacks to vote.
That need to energize black voters explains to a degree the
great effort by HillaryÕs campaign and the compliant media like The Washington Post
to paint Trump as a racist. The
slender reed upon which it was based was TrumpÕs anti-immigration position and
his support by likely phony Òwhite supremacists.Ó In reality, there is no good reason why
his anti-immigration and anti-trade-deal position should not have resonated
with American blacks even more than it did with TrumpÕs white base, because a
higher percentage of blacks are among the working class whose circumstances
have been worsened through competition with desperate foreigners.
What took place in Fayetteville should be understood within
that context, as I wrote back
in late March:
The white-on-black assault at the Fayetteville rally fits
the media narrative almost too well, which is why they would play it up, and is
also a big reason to suspect its authenticity. One might contrast it with what happened at a
Trump rally in Tucson, Arizona, a few days later. There a powerfully built young man
administered a brief but serious beating to a disrupter decked out in a cut-up
American flag and accompanied by a person mockingly wearing a Ku Klux Klan
hood. In that instance, though, the
attacker was black and the absorber of the punches and kicks was white. It was clearly the real thing, an act of
spontaneous outrage by a man who turned out to be an Air Force staff sergeant
on active duty at a nearby base. It
didnÕt fit the ÒracistÓ narrative, though, so we hear little about it.
Looking at
it with the Project Veritas light shown upon it, one
might conclude that the Tucson disrupter, in terms of the price he paid, more
than earned his money. In terms of
what they accomplished, though, McGraw and Jones clearly were the better bargain. With the mediaÕs ample assistance they
did help imprint upon the minds of a lot of people the rather absurd notion
that the election was a white vs. black affair, and black and liberal voters were sufficiently energized that Hillary
Clinton received 2,189,316 votes in North Carolina, surpassing even the
2,178,388 that Obama had received in 2012.
Unfortunately for Clinton, though, the ÒunpopularÓ winning Trump got 2,362,631
votes in the Tar Heel State, while the winning Mitt Romney had received only
2,270,395 there in 2012.
As a final
note, I canÕt help but point out the irony of the indisputable fact that the
most likely people to accept the authenticity of the Òsucker punchÓ thrown by
McGraw would be the self-satisfied sophisticates of the type who regularly
watch the Public Broadcasting
System
or listen to National Public Radio. These are the same people who take
superior pleasure in laughing at the unwashed masses who think professional
wrestling is real.
* In my
article ÒOn the Trail of the Fayetteville
ÔSucker PuncherÕÓ
I present evidence that suggests that this camper might not be McGrawÕs
full-time residence. He seems also
to have a more permanent residence in the mountain town of Galax, Virginia.
David
Martin
December
22, 2016
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