Businesses in downtown Austin board up following FBI warnings

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

Businesses in downtown Austin board up following FBI warnings

The owners of approximately 20 other businesses are waiting to see what happens over the next few days. 

More than a dozen businesses in downtown Austin have boarded up following an FBI warning about armed demonstrations at state capitols ahead of and on Inauguration Day

Buford Snyder of Snyder Commercial Glass says his company has boarded up approximately 15 businesses downtown. He says the owners of approximately 20 other businesses are waiting to see what happens over the next few days. 

For Jagat Patel, owner of the 7-Eleven on 8th and Congress, it’s the second time in twelve months his business has been boarded up to prevent looting and rioting. "We have family to go home to and we have bills to pay so don’t do that. We are human beings," he stressed. 

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

DPS on high alert at Capitol after warning of possible armed protests

The gates of the Texas State Capitol were marked off, chained, and zip-tied to keep the public out as the FBI warned of possible armed protests at all 50 state capitols. FOX 7 Austin's Amanda Ruiz has more.

Patel says the year has been "rough." Working through a pandemic is unnerving, and for the past six months, it has not been profitable.

Located downtown, most of his customers are tourists and office workers. "We are already suffering and by vandalizing us you are putting us in a deeper hole. We are already in a hole," he said. 

DOWNLOAD THE FOX 7 AUSTIN NEWS APP

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

Protesters show up at Texas State Capitol despite closure

FOX 7 Austin's Shannon Ryan spoke to demonstrators, most of them boogaloo boys, about what brought them out.

SIGN UP FOR FOX 7 AUSTIN EMAIL ALERTS

This weekend, a few armed demonstrations took place at the state capitol.

They were small, and there was no violence.

Patel, who believes the right to protest is important, hopes things do not escalate. "I want people to understand that, you know, we are going through a pandemic. We have gone through elections. We don’t have to agree on everything politically speaking, but we do have to agree on one thing, is we are all humans and we have to treat each other that way." 

Inauguration DayTexas PoliticsCrime and Public SafetyCapitol Riot