"Obviously, I'm very happy not to have a judgment against me. I don't think I should have had to go to court," Little told ABC11 about the verdict from an Orange County judge.
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The judge found Little, a UNC doctoral candidate, guilty on the misdemeanor charge of defacing a public monument.
But because of her status as a student with little income, the judge did not order her to pay a fine or court costs.
Last April, video of Little's protest was broadcast on Facebook Live as she smeared her own blood and red ink on the Silent Sam statue.
At Monday's trial, she testified in her own defense - telling the judge Silent Sam was built on violence against black people and stood as a monument to the ideals of slave-holding Confederate states.
"In court today, the prosecutor said that he respects me; that he's glad the monument is gone," Little said. "And, if that's true, if he really respects me and is glad the monument's gone, he would've dropped the charges."
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Orange County prosecutor Billy Masssengale told the court he hoped the statue would not return after demonstrators pulled it down last August.
Massengale said Julian Carr's 1913 Silent Sam dedication speech was one of the most difficult things he's had to hear.
Carr, a wealthy industrialist, philanthropist, UNC alumnus, and Confederate veteran entertained the crowd that day with a story of horse-whipping a black woman on Franklin Street.
"I feel like my family has been on the wrong side of this," said Carr's great great great granddaughter Meg Yarnell, who spoke to us via FaceTime from her home in Northern California.
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Last week, Yarnell penned an open letter to UNC administrators that acknowledged Carr as a white supremacist. She also called for criminal charges to be dropped against Maya Little and the other demonstrators arrested during and after Silent Sam's toppling.
"It was important to me to do whatever I could to try to support Maya and the other anti-racist activists," Yarnell said. "(Little is) a leader and I would hope the administration would embrace her."
Little told ABC11 she believes the reason she was able to leave the Orange County Courthouse with no punishment is that so many members of the community rallied behind her, in what she described as a stand against any acceptance of white supremacy.
"We have a stake in protecting each other and treating each other as equals and I think Julian Carr's great great great granddaughter knows that," Little said. "And I'm glad she spoke up."
Little still faces an upcoming hearing before UNC's Honor Court, where she could be expelled from the university.