Los Angeles Times

Both men reported armed in protest death

Court documents say antifascis­t suspect and right-wing protester each had guns in fatal Portland, Ore., clash.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORTLAND, Ore. — Both the suspect in the slaying of a right-wing protester in Portland, Ore., last weekend and the victim had handguns when their confrontat­ion started after dueling street demonstrat­ions, according to court documents made public Friday.

The documents said victim Aaron “Jay” Danielson, a supporter of a rightwing group called Patriot Prayer, was wearing a loaded Glock pistol in a holster and had bear spray and an expandable metal baton when someone apparently issued a challenge to fight, saying something like “wanna go?”

Authoritie­s have said they believe antifa supporter Michael Forest Reinoehl — who was fatally shot by federal agents late Thursday in Washington state — then opened fire and killed Danielson, who had taken part in a caravan of President Trump supporters who drove pickups through downtown Portland.

Some of the Trump supporters fired paintball pellets at counter-demonstrat­ors, while Black Lives Matter protesters tried to block the vehicles.

Law enforcemen­t officials released the informatio­n they had compiled — justifying an arrest warrant for Reinoehl on a second-degree murder charge in the Aug. 29 killing — one day after Reinoehl’s own killing shook a quiet suburb of Olympia, Wash.

On Thursday night bystanders ducked behind automobile­s for cover from dozens of gunshots as four agents serving on a U.S. Marshals Service task force opened fire on Reinoehl.

Authoritie­s said Reinoehl, 48, was armed with a semiautoma­tic handgun. A witness who was driving to the small apartment complex that Reinoehl was leaving said she saw him open fire from a car and that the officers returned fire.

Reinoehl then got out of the car and started running away but collapsed amid more gunfire, the witness, Deshirlynn Chatman, told the Olympian newspaper.

“He did open fire first,” she said in a video posted by the Olympian. Lt. Ray Brady of the Thurston County Sheriff’s Department said investigat­ors have not concluded whether Reinoehl fired any shots.

Another video shot during the immediate aftermath showed Reinoehl lying motionless on the street with law enforcemen­t officers in tactical gear and automatic rifles milling around. After several minutes, one man performed chest compressio­ns on Reinoehl.

“Yeah, I don’t think he’s going to make it,” Jashon Spencer narrated on the video that he posted on Facebook.

Brady said he did not believe the officers involved in the shooting had body cameras or dashboard cameras on their vehicles.

In a videotaped interview broadcast the evening of his death by Vice News, Reinoehl came close to admitting he shot Danielson, a supporter of a right-wing group called Patriot Prayer, on Aug. 29 after a caravan of Trump backers drove their pickups through Portland.

Reinoehl said he “had no choice” but to do what he did because he thought he and a friend were about to be stabbed.

“I hate to say it, but I see a civil war right around the corner,” Reinoehl, with a partially covered tattoo of a raised fist on the right side of his neck, said in the interview.

Reinoehl told Vice News he was an antifascis­t but was not a member of antifa, an umbrella descriptio­n for farleft-leaning groups of that resist neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts at demonstrat­ions and other events. Reinoehl previously described himself in a social media post as “100% ANTIFA.”

Facebook said on Friday they removed pages related to Patriot Prayer, whose members have brawled with antifa activists and other demonstrat­ors in the past.

“They were removed as part of our ongoing efforts to remove violent social militias from our platform,” Facebook spokespers­on Sally Aldous said.

It was not immediatel­y clear where Reinoehl had hid out in the five days since the shooting in Portland.

Brady said the “suspect” who was killed — he declined to name him as Reinoehl — left an apartment around 7 p.m. Thursday, got into a vehicle and was confronted by the task force members. They fired into the vehicle, and Reinoehl got out and ran and was shot, Brady said.

Federal agents from the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service had located Reinoehl on Thursday after a warrant was issued for his arrest, and Reinoehl pulled a gun during the encounter, a senior Justice Department official in Washington said. The official wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

A U.S. Marshals Service statement issued later said the fugitive task force had “attempted to peacefully arrest him.”

“Initial reports indicate the suspect produced a firearm, threatenin­g the lives of law enforcemen­t officers,” the statement said.

U.S. Marshals Service fugitive task forces — comprised of deputy marshals, other federal agents and local law enforcemen­t officers from a variety of agencies — apprehend violent felons and other suspects.

Brady said the four task force members who fired their weapons were two Pierce County sheriff ’s deputies, a police officer from the Washington city of Lakewood and a Washington State Department of Correction­s officer.

Brady said investigat­ors haven’t yet determined how many rounds were fired, but witnesses Chad Smith and Chase Cutler, who were working on cars nearby, told the News Tribune they saw two SUVs converge on a man in a vehicle at the apartment complex. They said they heard 40 to 50 shots, according to the Tacoma, Wash., newspaper.

Brady said he doesn’t think the suspect lived at the address where he was shot, and that it was not clear what brought him to Lacey, on the outskirts of Olympia, the state capital.

Reinoehl’s sister, who requested her name not be used because she and her family have been receiving threats, said in an interview with the Associated Press on Friday that she had had not been in touch with him for three years.

She said her brother’s son and daughter “need to be allowed to grieve what happened.”

“My heart breaks for those kids, but hopefully they can put their lives back together and sort through this and process the trauma that no one that young should ever have to deal with,” the sister said.

 ?? Ted Warren Associated Press ?? INVESTIGAT­ORS CHECK the scene Thursday in Lacey, Wash., where officers shot antifascis­t Michael Reinoehl, suspected in last week’s killing of Aaron Danielson, a right-wing demonstrat­or in Portland, Ore.
Ted Warren Associated Press INVESTIGAT­ORS CHECK the scene Thursday in Lacey, Wash., where officers shot antifascis­t Michael Reinoehl, suspected in last week’s killing of Aaron Danielson, a right-wing demonstrat­or in Portland, Ore.

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