On Saturday afternoon, the area around the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., once again filled up with demonstrators protesting the court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 case that allowed for legal access to abortion across the country.

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I stayed on the bridge last night. There’s a hatch up here I can crawl down any time, but my batteries still have charge and there’s more to do up here. I wrapped up in the green banner against the cold and slept . pic.twitter.com/bVCIc1Hxnj
— Guido Reichstadter (@GuidoReichstad1) June 25, 2022
When reaching the ground, Reichstader, who is from Miami, Florida, was promptly arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department and charged with Unlawful Entry, Crowding and Obstructing, and Failure to Obey Police. In another sphere of D.C., politicians both lamented and gloated upon the Supreme Court’s Friday ruling. On Twitter, Massachusetts Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren referred to the justices who overturned Roe v. Wade as “extremists”.
If the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade feels like a personal attack, it’s because it is. Extremists are trying to send us back to the days when women had no control over our own bodies and our own futures. But I’ve got news for them: we still have the power to fight back.
— Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) June 25, 2022
Meanwhile, Republican Senator John Cornyn from Texas spent most of his Saturday doing damage control after he responded to a Tweet by former President Barack Obama by comparing the abortion debate to Brown v. Board of Education, the 1952 SCOTUS case that decided racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional.
Now do Plessy vs Ferguson/Brown vs Board of Education. https://t.co/hrUYCcIq8Y
— Senator John Cornyn (@JohnCornyn) June 25, 2022
As protests at SCOTUS began to ramp up on Saturday afternoon, it was in stark contrast to the early morning in D.C., where all that was left of the preceding day’s protests were a handful of signs leftover with litter along the streets. Though police officers were present for protests throughout the day and night, WTOP’s Alejandro Alvarez reported that there were no known arrests Friday. The rally ended Friday night before 11 p.m. and the crowd dispersed, WTOP’s news partners at NBC Washington reported. The situation was different in Arizona, where SWAT team members fired tear gas from the second floor of Phoenix’s Capitol building to disperse protesters, some of whom were reportedly banging on the doors of the Senate building. Arizona authorities said there were no injuries or arrests. WTOP’s Jessica Kronzer, Luke Lukert and Alejandro Alvarez contributed to this report.
