Answer:
The Regulators attacked court officials and destroyed private property.
Step-by-step explanation:
In colonial history, the Regulators were a society that came together in North Carolina between 1764 and 1771 who fought the high legal fees they were charged for transactions and they stood against the corruption of colonial officials. One appointed official named Edmund Fanning was a figurehead of corruption and the kind of privilege that the Regulators were protesting against. The Regulators were protesting the high fees they had to pay on their landholdings in Western North Carolina which were less productive or fertile than Eastern Carolina landholdings. The Regulators opposed being taxed at the same rate. Fanning went on to become an official in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island when many of the loyalists relocated to Canada where he was also accused of corrupt acts according to historical records. The War of Regulation or Regulation Movement in and around Hillsborough, NC are considered a local precursor of the kind of greivances that brought about the American Revolution.