Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US attorney: 18 more arrested in Portland on federal charges.

Says state lacks standing to sue for protesters

- Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, Ore. – A U.S. judge Friday denied an order sought by Oregon’s top law enforcemen­t officer to stop federal agents from arresting people during nightly protests in Portland that have roiled the progressiv­e city and pitted local officials against the Trump administra­tion.

U.S. District Court Judge Michael Mosman said the state lacked standing to sue on behalf of protesters.

Demonstrat­ors have taken to the streets to oppose racial injustice since George Floyd’s death by Minneapoli­s police two months ago, and many have spiraled into violence. President Donald Trump decried the disorder and sent in federal agents early this month to quell the unrest despite outcry from Democratic leaders in Oregon.

The clash has further inflamed the nation’s political tensions and triggered a crisis over the limits of federal power in states as Trump moves to send U.S. officers 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.

Protesters in Portland have been targeting the federal courthouse, setting fires outside and vandalizin­g the building that U.S. authoritie­s say they have a duty to protect. Federal agents have used tear gas, less-lethal ammunition that left one person critically injured and other force to scatter protesters, and they have made arrests.

Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum sued the Trump administra­tion last week, alleging federal agents have arrested protesters without probable cause, whisked them away in unmarked cars and used excessive force. U.S. authoritie­s deny those accusation­s.

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.”

Before the aggressive language and action from federal officials, 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. But the Democrat says the federal presence is exacerbati­ng a tense situation and he’s repeatedly told them to leave.

Wheeler, who was tear-gassed as he joined protesters this week, has faced opposition from all sides, for not bringing the protests under control before federal officers arrived and for standing by as Portland police used tear gas and other tactics.

Homeland Security acting Secretary Chad Wolf denied that federal agents were inflaming the situation in Portland and said Wheeler legitimize­d criminalit­y by going to the front of the crowd of demonstrat­ors where fires were lit and people were trying to pull down the protective fence.

Trump has called protesters “agitators & anarchists.” With less than four months until Election Day, he’s warned that violence will worsen if his Democratic rival Joe Biden is elected in November and Democrats have a chance to make the police reforms they have endorsed after the Floyd’s death.

In the lawsuit, Oregon had asked the judge to immediatel­y command agents from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Protective Service and the U.S. Marshals Service to stop detaining protesters without probable cause, to identify themselves before arresting anyone and to explain why an arrest is taking place.

The action comes as U.S. agents have arrested 18 people in Portland this week as the clash with protesters turned chaotic for another night.

The number doesn’t include arrests made early Friday, when federal officers again used tear gas to force thousands of demonstrat­ors from crowding around a U.S. courthouse, a target of two months of nightly protests. Protesters projected lasers on the building and tried to take down a security fence.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/AP ?? A federal officer fires crowd control munitions at Black Lives Matter protesters at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday in Portland, Ore.
NOAH BERGER/AP A federal officer fires crowd control munitions at Black Lives Matter protesters at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday in Portland, Ore.

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