Cops’ action at Ore. rally under review
Protesters target far-right activists
Portland, Ore., police were accused Sunday of being heavy-handed against people protesting a rally by extreme-right demonstrators, reportedly injuring some counterprotesters and prompting the city’s new police chief to order a review of officers’ use of force.
Police in riot gear tried to keep the two groups apart, many of whom had come on Saturday dressed for battle in helmets and protective clothing. Dozens of the extreme-right protesters were bused to Portland, one of America’s most liberal cities, from nearby Vancouver, Wash.
Saturday’s clashes were the most recent of several this year in the city as rightwing militants converged, met by counterprotesters, including members of selfdescribed anti-fascist, or “antifa,” groups. City officials have struggled with striking a balance between free speech and keeping events from spiraling out of control.
But on Saturday, some said police seemed to act mostly against those protesting the presence of the extreme-right demonstrators, using stun grenades and what appeared to be rubber bullets against them.
Police “targeted Portland residents peacefully counter-protesting against racist far-right groups, including white supremacists, white nationalists, and neo-Nazi gangs,” the Oregon chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Portland chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America said in a statement. It called on officials to investigate.
Declaring an increasingly tense situation several hours in to be a “civil disturbance” after rocks and bottles were allegedly thrown at officers, police ordered the counterprotesters to disperse, then moved in behind a volley of stun grenades. One of the rounds reportedly hit a counterprotester in the head, becoming embedded in his helmet and injuring him. One woman was taken to a hospital after being hit in the arm and chest with a “flash-bang” grenade, local media reported. The blasts echoed through downtown Portland.
A reporter for The Oregonian/Oregon Live was bloodied when he was struck by a projectile. Eder Campuzano said later on Twitter he was “okay.”
Officers also used pepper spray.
Four people were arrested. Officers also seized “multiple weapons throughout the day,” police said.
Police Chief Danielle Outlaw, who assumed command less than a year ago as Portland’s first African-American female police chief, said in a statement Sunday she takes all use-offorce cases seriously.