PORTLAND,
Ore. (AP) — Protesters broke into a building, set it on fire and
started dumpster fires late Saturday night in Oregon’s largest city,
police said, as demonstrations that have been taking place since the
death of George Floyd intensified for another night in Portland.
The fire at the Portland Police Association building was put out a short time later, Portland police said on Twitter. The department declared the gathering a riot, and began working to clear the downtown area.
Tear gas was deployed, according to pictures and video from the scene. Fencing that had been placed around federal courthouse had also been removed by protesters and made into barricades, police tweeted.
President
Donald Trump has decried the demonstrations, and Homeland Security
Secretary Chad Wolf blasted the protesters as “lawless anarchists” in a
visit to the city on Thursday.
Before the aggressive language and action from federal officials, the unrest had frustrated
Mayor Ted Wheeler and other local authorities, who had said a small
cadre of violent activists were drowning out the message of peaceful
protesters in the city. But Wheeler said the federal presence in the
city is now exacerbating a tense situation and he has told them to
depart.
“Keep your troops in your own buildings, or have them leave our city,” Wheeler said Friday.
Oregon
Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum late Friday sued Homeland Security and
the Marshals Service in federal court. The complaint said unidentified
federal agents have grabbed people off Portland’s streets “without
warning or explanation, without a warrant, and without providing any way
to determine who is directing this action.”
Rosenblum
said she was seeking a temporary restraining order to “immediately stop
federal authorities from unlawfully detaining Oregonians.”
The
administration has enlisted federal agents, including the U.S. Marshals
Special Operations Group and an elite U.S. Customs and Border
Protection team based on the U.S.-Mexico border, to protect federal
property.
But
Oregon Public Broadcasting reported this week that some agents had been
driving around in unmarked vans and snatching protesters from streets
not near federal property, without identifying themselves.
Tensions
also escalated after an officer with the Marshals Service fired a
less-lethal round at a protester’s head on July 11, critically injuring
him.
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Oregon, issued a
joint statement Saturday denouncing the Trump administration’s actions.
“We
live in a democracy, not a banana republic. We will not tolerate the
use of Oregonians, Washingtonians — or any other Americans — as props in
President Trump’s political games. The House is committed to moving
swiftly to curb these egregious abuses of power immediately,” they said.
Hundreds of
people had gathered Friday night for a vigil outside the downtown
Justice Center, which is sandwiched between two federal buildings,
including a courthouse, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported. Across the
street, dozens of other protesters entered two recently closed city
parks after dismantling chain-link fencing that blocked access.
Federal
agents emerged from an office building next door and used impact
munitions, stun grenades and tear gas to clear the area, the news
organization reported. It said its journalists did not observe any
incident that might have prompted the use of the weapons.
Federal
officers deployed tear gas again just before midnight after a few
protesters placed dismantled fencing in front of plywood doors covering
the entrance of the federal courthouse.
Early
Saturday, Portland police declared the gathering unlawful, saying
protesters had piled fencing in front of the exits to the federal
courthouse and the Multnomah County Justice Center and then shot off
fireworks at the Justice Center.
Federal
officers and local police then advanced simultaneously on the
demonstrators to clear the streets, making arrests as protesters threw
bottles and pieces of metal fence at police, the Portland Police Bureau
said. Portland Police Chief Chuck Lovell told reporters Friday that his
officers are in contact with the federal agents, but that neither
controls the others’ actions.
The
overnight action by Portland’s police was condemned Jo Ann Hardesty, a
prominent member of the City Council. Hardesty said Saturday that local
police “joined in the aggressive clampdown of peaceful protest.”
Hardesty
also slammed Wheeler, telling the mayor he needed to better control
local law enforcement. Hardesty, who oversees the city’s fire department
and other first-responder agencies, said in an open letter to Wheeler
if “you can’t control the police, give me the Portland Police Bureau.”
In
a statement Saturday, Portland Police said as they responded to the
overnight protests — which included people throwing projectiles at them —
some federal agencies took action “under their own supervision and
direction.” Portland Police said city officers arrested seven people,
and one officer sustained a minor injury.
The
statement said the city’s police supports peaceful protests, and
beginning Saturday night Department of Homeland Security police wouldn’t
work in the Portland Police incident command center.
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