A federal official says a woman who climbed the Statue of Liberty's base and spurred the statue's evacuation on July Fourth told police she was protesting the separation of immigrant children from parents who cross the U.S.-Mexico border illegally.
The protester, who climbed the Statue of Liberty's base, was escorted down by police after a roughly four-hour standoff.
#BREAKING Reports of person climbing Statue of Libertyhttps://t.co/5lG5nrxRKp pic.twitter.com/UeFoOTHB0R
— Eyewitness News (@ABC7NY) July 4, 2018
After two New York Police Department officers went up to the base and reached her, news helicopter video showed her and the officers moving carefully along the edge of the statue's robes toward a ladder police had set up.
She climbed down about 25 feet (8 meters) to the statue's observation point, with another officer descending ahead of her.
A federal official identified the woman as Therese Okoumou. The official wasn't authorized to discuss it and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
The group that organized a protest, Rise and Resist, at the statue earlier Wednesday says Okoumou took part in unfurling a banner at the statue's pedestal calling for abolishing the federal government's chief immigration enforcement agency. But the group says no one else was aware she would climb the base.
At least six people were arrested in the banner demonstration.