NATION NOW

Student arrested after wearing gorilla mask to Black Lives Matter protest

Mary Bowerman
USA TODAY Network

An East Tennessee State University student was arrested Tuesday week after wearing a gorilla mask and carrying a rope during a Black Lives Matter protest on campus, according to local reports.

Tristan Rettke was charged with civil rights intimidation following the incident, according to a Johnson City Police Department report, WCYB-TV reported. 

Earlier this week as students protested recent police shootings, Rettke walked amongst the crowd wearing a gorilla mask and offering protesters bananas attached to a rope, the East Tennessean, the university’s newspaper, reported.

Grant Madison, a junior at the university, told USA TODAY he was talking with a friend when Rettke walked up behind him.

“He passed by me and handed me a banana,” he said. “I snatched it out of his hand. I knew what he was trying to say, but I wasn’t going to try to retaliate against him.”

Madison, who livestreamed the incident on Facebook, said the young man stood there and taunted protesters for 15-20 minutes.

“As younger black folks … we don’t always see the same overt displays of racism our parents may have experienced or our grandparents,” he said. “For me, it was the first time I’ve experienced something so blatantly disrespectful and racist.”

911 calls fell in black Milwaukee neighborhoods after Jude beating, study finds

East Tennessee State University Public Safety officers eventually led Rettke, who was also carrying a burlap bag with a Confederate flag on it, away from the protesters, Madison said.

University President Brian Noland said he was “saddened” by the incident at a press conference Wednesday.

“We are exceptionally proud of the students who were peacefully participating in the event and the manner in which they exercised restraint, thoughtfulness and strength in the face of inappropriate and offensive behavior,” Noland said in a statement.

Madison said students gathered Tuesday night to talk about the incident on campus. He said that many of the students involved in the protest have forgiven Rettke.

“We hold no ill towards him,” he said. “I added him on Facebook, and want to speak with him about why he did it.”

Follow @MaryBowerman on Twitter. 

Watch full video below: