Additional charges have been brought against individuals related to two separate rallies on the UNC – Chapel Hill campus over the last 10 days related to the Confederate monument on the campus known as Silent Sam.

There have now been 14 individuals charged after a rally last Monday where the statue was pulled down from its pedestal and a subsequent event where opposing groups gathered on McCorkle Place around the monument’s base on Saturday. Over the weekend, authorities identified 11 individuals who had been arrested.

Three additional individuals have now been identified by UNC Police as facing charges: 18-year-old Margarita Sitterson, 20-year-old Michael Mole and 23-year-old Timothy Osborne.

Sitterson is charged with misdemeanor riot and misdemeanor defacing a public monument in connection with Monday’s rally where the statue was toppled. The university said it could not confirm or deny whether Sitterson was related to the former UNC – Chapel Hill Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson, but the Raleigh TV station CBS17 is reporting that they have confirmed the recently arrested Sitterson is the granddaughter of the former chancellor.

Criminal summons have been issued for Mole on a charge of simple assault and Osborne for one count of affray. Both of those charges are related to Saturday’s rally.

Another rally expected to bring groups that oppose and support the removal of Silent Sam is set for Thursday night. Officials from both the university and the town sent out statements recommending that residents stay away from McCorkle Place on Thursday night.

The UNC System Board of Governors, meanwhile, have directed UNC – Chapel Hill to “develop and present to the Board of Governors a plan for the monument’s disposition and preservation, which should be presented to the Board of Governors by November 15, 2018.” Board of Governors chair Harry Smith said that the board would “conduct an external after action assessment and review of UNC-Chapel Hill’s preparation for and response to the August 20 protest.”