Kentucky Governor's Mansion to get fence after protest

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — A security fence will go up around the Kentucky Governor's Mansion in response to a spring demonstration where armed protesters gathered outside the home and then hanged Gov. Andy Beshear in effigy, the governor's office said Tuesday.

Security officials requested the fence be built after the late May protest, Beshear spokeswoman Crystal Staley said. The project's costs won’t be known until all bids are submitted later this month, said Jill Midkiff, a spokeswoman for the state Finance and Administration Cabinet.

Demonstrators crossed barriers to reach the front porch of the mansion, “just a window pane away" from where Beshear and his wife are raising their two children, Staley said. Protesters chanted for the governor to come outside. No one came to the door, as state troopers monitoring the rally got out of their vehicles to observe the group but not intervene, the Courier Journal reported.

The effigy of the Democratic governor later was hanged in a tree on the state Capitol grounds. A video from that day showed that some of the demonstrators were armed.

“At that time, the Kentucky State Police executive security requested a fence be built for the safety of the current and future first families," Staley said Tuesday in a statement.

Initially, funding for the fencing will come from the state Department for Facilities and Support Services’ budget, Midkiff said. But a private foundation has indicated it plans to consider reimbursing the state for the expenses, she said.

The fencing will be 4 to 5 feet (1.2 to 1.5 meters) high and will “maintain the integrity” of the mansion’s exterior, Midkiff said. The timeline calls for the installation to be completed within 75 days after the contract is awarded, she said.

The spring demonstration was billed as a rally in defense of constitutional rights, including the right to bear arms. It turned into a protest against coronavirus restrictions and Beshear’s administration.

Beshear later referred to the protesters as a mob that resorted to “fear and terror.”

“Crossing over barriers, standing on the other side of the glass from where I raise my kids and hanging me in an effigy, that’s an action intended to use fear to get their way,” he said in the days after the protest.

The governor said he would not back down — “not to them and not to anybody else."

Like other governors, Beshear took steps to loosen virus-related restrictions as the economy reopened. But with coronavirus cases on the rise in Kentucky, Beshear issued a recent order requiring most Kentuckians to wear face coverings in public places.

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