blood and soil, a torch light march the night before, and vicious battles in the streets, the rally shocked america with its brazen racism and anti-semitism. you will not replace us. reporter: and the equivocation from then president trump poured fuel on the controversy, seemingly legitimatizing the alt-right, white supremacists, and white nationalism in america. you had some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. reporter: dozens were injured in street brawls. the violence culminated with a white nationalist james fields plowing his car into a crowd of counter protesters. one of them, 32-year-old paralegal heather heyer was killed. several others were injured. one of the nine plaintiffs is liz signs who says fields car almost hit her. i will never forget watching them attack my fellow students or the feeling of running for my life. reporter: another plaintiff is natalie romero. the lawsuit says she was hit by field
how are things there now? reporter: ana, things are fairly quiet on the streets now, but i can tell you that the anger here has not calmed down since yesterday. people here are extremely angry because of what has happened in this town over the past 48 hours. when you think of it, you start with that torch light march through the university of virginia campus on friday night where there were some scuffles and some people hurt when these white supremacists marched through the campus and of course, yesterday, the violence and the fighting and the street between the white supremacists and the counterprotesters, and then the horrific car strike just a few feet away from us here on fourth street where this young lady heather heyer was killeded. today the white supremacist who organized this, jason kessler tried to come back here and have a news conference. he was shouted down. there was violence. there were people screaming at him. the police had to swarm in and shuttle him out of here fo