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Detroit cops thwart 'Charlottesville No. 2' from neo-Nazi group at gay pride festival

Detroit's police chief says officers prevented violence by a neo-Nazi group that wanted to spark "Charlottesville No. 2" during a gay pride festival over the weekend. 

Five people among the roughly 15 white supremacists were legally carrying firearms, police say

Detroit Police Chief James Craig (Mike Householder/The Associated Press)

Detroit's police chief says officers prevented violence by a neo-Nazi group that wanted to spark "Charlottesville No. 2" during a gay pride festival over the weekend. 

Chief James Craig said Monday that five people among about 15 white supremacists were legally carrying firearms while they traded barbs with 15-20 counter protesters during the Motor City Pride festival in downtown Detroit. 

Craig says the department's intelligence sources indicated the group wanted to spark violence similar to the deadly 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. 

Craig says officers kept the groups separate and no injuries occurred. He says members of both groups shouted racial epithets at each other and toward police officers in an attempt to bait them into a violent response. No shots were fired during the confrontation.