San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FEDERAL AGENTS USE TEAR GAS TO CLEAR ORE. PROTEST

Thousands gather, turn rowdy; assembly is declared unlawful

- BY GILLIAN FLACCUS & SARA CLINE Flaccus and Cline write for The Associated Press.

Thousands of protesters gathered outside the federal courthouse in Portland, Ore., into the early hours Saturday, shooting fireworks at the building as plumes of tear gas dispensed by U.S. agents lingered above.

The demonstrat­ion went 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.

Portland has been roiled by nightly protests for two months following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. President Donald Trump said he sent federal agents to Oregon’s largest city to halt the unrest but state and local officials say they are making the situation worse.

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 he says are violent.

Late Friday a federal judge denied a request by Oregon’s attorney general to restrict the actions of federal police.

The Federal Protective Service had declared the gathering in Portland that began Friday evening as “an unlawful assembly” and said that officers had been injured.

As the crowd dispersed, someone was found stabbed nearby, Portland police said. The person was taken to a hospital and a suspect was taken into custody.

By 3 a.m., most demonstrat­ors had left, 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 — authoritie­s estimate there were 3,000 present at the peak of the protest — 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 f low of tear gas caused protesters to disperse at times, as others remained toward 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 protester 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 have arrested dozens during nightly demonstrat­ions against racial injustice that often turn violent.

The state attorney general sued, saying some people had been whisked off the streets in unmarked vehicles. U.S. District Judge Michael Mosman ruled Friday the state lacked standing to sue on behalf of protesters 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.

 ?? NOAH BERGER AP ?? A Black Lives Matter protester uses a shield as federal officers use chemical irritants to disperse demonstrat­ors at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday night in Portland, Ore.
NOAH BERGER AP A Black Lives Matter protester uses a shield as federal officers use chemical irritants to disperse demonstrat­ors at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday night in Portland, Ore.
 ?? NOAH BERGER AP ?? A medic treats protester Lacey Wambalaba after exposure to chemical irritants deployed by federal officers Friday.
NOAH BERGER AP A medic treats protester Lacey Wambalaba after exposure to chemical irritants deployed by federal officers Friday.

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