coronavirus

Co-Founder of the ‘ReOpen Maryland' Movement Sickened With COVID-19

Members of the Reopen Maryland group protest the stay at home orders by Maryland Govenor Larry Hogan around the State House on Friday Afternoon.
Photo by Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post via Getty Images ANNAPOLIS, MD – MAY 15: A group called “Reopen Maryland ” say the pledge of allegiance as they gather to protest the restrictions imposed by Maryland Governor Larry Hogan to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus. Most states and U.S. territories have begun to ease restrictions on businesses and social activity, moving to reopen economies battered by the novel coronavirus pandemic and weeks of stay-at-home orders that affected some 315 million Americans. (Photo by Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

A Maryland man who has helped organize “reopen” protests against measures intended to slow the spread of the coronavirus says he has been sickened with COVID-19.

Tim Walters, a co-founder of the ReOpen Maryland movement, announced this week on social media that he has tested positive, the Capital Gazette and Washington Post reported.

“I was diagnosed yesterday at the ER with COVID-19 and here I am months after not wearing a mask at rallies, churches and so on and so it’s funny how capricious this thing is,” he said in a Facebook video, according to the newspapers.

Walters, a two-time Republican candidate for the state legislature, helped organize ReOpen Maryland protests in Annapolis, on the Eastern Shore and elsewhere in Maryland.

He declined an interview request from either newspaper, which reported that he said he would not provide any information to public health officials trying to trace the spread of the disease. Walters emphasized he had contacted people he'd recently interacted with.

Gov. Larry Hogan posted a link to the Annapolis paper's story to his own Facebook page Friday.

“Our health experts are strongly encouraging anyone who attended a demonstration or mass gathering to immediately get tested for coronavirus, and they are also advised to avoid contact with vulnerable populations,” Hogan wrote.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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