A black man who was beaten at a
far-right rally in Virginia has turned himself in to be formally charged
in connection with the incident. Photos and video of Mr Harris, 20, being attacked by white men at the event were widely shared online.
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| The first torch-lit rally (pictured) at the statue took place in August |
Another individual alleged that Mr Harris attacked him, prompting the arrest warrant to be issued on Tuesday. Mr Harris's lawyer, S Lee Merritt, said his client did nothing wrong and authorities did not have probable cause to prosecute him.
Mr Harris could face up to five years in prison and a $2,500 fine (£1,880). The attorney said his client, a former special-education instruction assistant, suffered a concussion, a knee injury and a fractured wrist.
The assault also left him with a head laceration that required stitches. "We find it highly offensive and upsetting," Mr Merritt told the Washington Post newspaper, "but what's more jarring is that he's been charged with the same crime as the men who attacked him."
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Mr Harris' lawyer said his client was accused of wounding a man named Harold Ray Crews. Video of the incident appears to show a scuffle between the two in which Mr Harris swings a torch at a man identified by US media as Mr Crews, who lunges at him with the pole of a Confederate flag.
Mr Harris' attorney maintains the torch did not "make significant contact" with Mr Crews, who describes himself on Twitter as a "Southern Nationalist, Attorney".
In the US, alleged crime victims can go to a magistrate after filing police reports. The magistrate only needs probable cause based on the alleged victim's testimony to grant an arrest warrant.
Mr Harris surrendered on Thursday a day after police charged a man identified as Jacob Scott Goodwin, 22, in connection with the car park brawl.
Police said Mr Goodwin, of Ward, Arkansas, could be seen on camera carrying a large plastic shield and kicking Mr Harris, who was on the ground.
