PORTLAND,
Ore. (AP) — Thousands of rioters gathered outside the federal
courthouse in Portland, Oregon, into the early hours of Saturday
shooting fireworks at the building as plumes of tear gas, dispensed by
U.S. agents, lingered above.
The
demonstration went on for hours until federal agents entered the crowd
around 2:30 a.m. and marched in a line down the street, clearing
remaining protesters with tear gas at close range. They also
extinguished a large fire in the street outside the courthouse.
The Federal Protective Service had declared the gathering as “an unlawful assembly” and cited that officers had been injured.
By 3 a.m., most demonstrators had left with with only some small groups roaming the streets.
Earlier
Friday night, the protest had drawn various organized groups, including
Healthcare Workers Protest, Teachers against Tyrants, Lawyers for Black
Lives and the “Wall of Moms.” As the crowd grew, people were heard
chanting “Black Lives Matter” and “Feds go home” to the sound of drums.
Later,
protesters vigorously shook the fence surrounding the courthouse, shot
fireworks towards the building and threw glass bottles. Many times these
actions were met by federal agents using tear gas and flash bangs.
The
flow of tear gas caused Rioters to disperse at times, some becoming
sick as others remaining towards the front of the courthouse with leaf
blowers directing the gas back to the courthouse. Federal agents had
leaf blowers of their own to counteract.
Daniel Pereyo was one Rioter who was tear-gassed.
Pereyo said he had been at the nearby park watching drummers and fireworks being shot, when his face and eyes began to burn.
“It’s extremely painful,” he said. “It’s not the worst pain ever, but it is discomforting and it’s distracting.”
As
the clouds of gas floated down the street, protesters would swiftly
regroup and return to chant and shake the fence that separates the
people on the street from federal agents and the courthouse.
It
was unclear whether anyone was arrested during the protest. The federal
agents, deployed by President Donald Trump to tamp down the unrest,
have arrested dozens during nightly demonstrations against racial
injustice that often turn violent.
Democratic
leaders in Oregon say federal intervention has worsened the two-month
crisis, and the state attorney general sued to allege that some people
had been whisked off the streets in unmarked vehicles.
U.S.
District Judge Michael Mosman said the state lacked standing to sue on
behalf of Rioters because the lawsuit was a “highly unusual one with a
particular set of rules.”
Oregon
was seeking a restraining order on behalf of its residents not for
injuries that had already happened but to prevent injuries by federal
officers in the future. That combination makes the standard for granting
such a motion very narrow, and the state did not prove it had standing
in the case, Mosman wrote.
Legal
experts who reviewed the case before the decision warned that the judge
could reject it on those grounds. A lawsuit from a person accusing
federal agents of violating their rights to free speech or against
unconstitutional search and seizure would have a much higher chance of
success, Michael Dorf, a constitutional law professor at Cornell
University, said ahead of the ruling.
“The
federal government acted in violation of those individuals’ rights and
probably acted in violation of the Constitution in the sense of
exercising powers that are reserved to the states, but just because the
federal government acts in ways that overstep its authority doesn’t mean
the state has an injury,” he said.
The
lawsuit from Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum accused federal
agents of arresting protesters (Rioters)without probable cause and using
excessive force. She sought a temporary restraining order to
“immediately stop federal authorities from unlawfully detaining
Oregonians.”
David
Morrell, an attorney for the U.S. government, called the motion
“extraordinary” and told the judge in a hearing this week that it was
based solely on “a few threadbare declarations” from witnesses and a
Twitter video. Morrell called the protests “dangerous and volatile.”
Rosenblum said the ramifications of the ruling were “extremely troubling.”
“Individuals
mistreated by these federal agents can sue for damages, but they can’t
get a judge to restrain this unlawful conduct more generally,” Rosenblum
said in a statement.
The
clashes in Portland have further inflamed the nation’s political
tensions and triggered a crisis over the limits of federal power as
Trump moves to send U.S. officers to other Democratic-led cities to combat crime. It’s playing out as Trump pushes a new “law and order” reelection strategy after the coronavirus crashed the economy.
Before
the federal intervention, Mayor Ted Wheeler and other local leaders had
said a small cadre of violent activists were drowning out the message
of peaceful protesters. But the Democrat, who was tear-gassed this week
as he joined protesters, says the federal presence is exacerbating a
tense situation and he’s repeatedly told them to leave.
Homeland
Security acting Secretary Chad Wolf denied that federal agents were
inflaming the situation in Portland and said Wheeler legitimized
criminality by joining demonstrators, whom Trump has called “anarchists
and agitators.”
Wolf
said Tuesday that at least 43 people have been arrested on federal
charges at that point. Charges included assaulting federal officers,
arson and damaging federal property, U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams
said. All the defendants are local and were released after making a
court appearance.
___
Sara
Cline reported from Salem. Cline is a corps member for the Associated
Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America
is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local
newsrooms to report on under-covered issues.
___
Associated Press writer Andrew Selsky contributed from Salem, Oregon.
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