Texarkana Gazette

Portland largely peaceful after right-wing rally

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PORTLAND, Ore. — Police say a right-wing rally and counter-protests in Portland, Oregon, have largely dispersed without serious violence Saturday, though they are investigat­ing an assault after one person who was documentin­g the event was pushed to the ground and kicked in the face.

Separately, police said a criminal citation was issued after officials confiscate­d firearms, paintball guns, baseball bats and shields from a pickup truck that was initially stopped for having obscured license plates as it left the rally.

Several hundred people, dozens of them wearing militarize­d body armor, gathered to support President Donald Trump and his "law and order" reelection campaign Saturday afternoon. The attendance was far fewer than the 10,000 organizers had expected after tensions boiled over nationwide following the decision not to charge officers in Louisville, Kentucky, for killing Breonna Taylor.

Organized by the Proud Boys, a group that has been designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, the rally was described as a free speech event to support Trump and police and condemn anti-fascists, "domestic terrorism" and "violent gangs of rioting felons" in the streets.

Local and state elected officials forcefully condemned the event and rushed to shore up law enforcemen­t ranks as left-wing groups organized several rallies to oppose the Proud Boys' message. About 1,000 counter-protesters gathered at another park.

The events began at noon and were largely dispersed by 3 p.m. The Oregon Department of Transporta­tion shut down the interstate highway for a brief time to help control the crowd and flow of traffic.

"The purpose of this closure was to clear some people out of the area who wanted to leave and to keep competing groups separate," said Chris Liedle, a spokesman with the Multnomah County Sheriff's Office, in updates posted on Twitter, as the city had braced for the threat of violence with multiple rallies in the area.

Police also said they arrested three people, including a man suspected of driving under the influence and a woman for an outstandin­g arrest warrant, Liedle said.

Dozens began to show up two hours before the rightwing rally, some packed into the beds of pickup trucks. Many were wearing militarize­d body armor, including helmets and protective vests. Many flew American flags or black flags bearing the logo of the Three Percenters, another far-right group and some wore Make America Great Again hats.

TJ Detweiler, who works in constructi­on and plumbing, said at the rally that he wanted to end domestic terrorism in the U.S.

"I would like to see people stop the looting and rioting and enjoy the country for what rights we have," Detweiler said.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown on Friday said she was sending state troopers to help the Portland police and was creating a unified command structure among city, regional and state law enforcemen­t — a tactic that essentiall­y circumvent­s a city ban on the use of tear gas as a crowd-control measure. The state police said a "massive influx" of troopers would be in Portland by Saturday morning.

"This is a critical moment. We have seen what happens when armed vigilantes take matters into their own hands. We've seen it in Charlottes­ville, we've seen it in Kenosha and, unfortunat­ely, we have seen it in Portland," she said, referencin­g deaths in Virginia, Wisconsin and Oregon during clashes between those on the right and left of the political spectrum.

"The Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer groups have come time and time again looking for a fight, and the results are always tragic," said Brown, a Democrat. "Let me be perfectly clear, we will not tolerate any type of violence this weekend."

The Proud Boys are self-described "Western chauvinist­s." They have held multiple events in Portland since Trump's election alongside other right-wing groups such as Patriot Prayer that often end in violent clashes with left-wing counter-demonstrat­ors.

Last month, Aaron "Jay" Danielson, a Trump supporter and Patriot Prayer follower, was shot and killed after vehicles in a pro-Trump car caravan diverted into downtown Portland and crossed paths with left-wing activists. The suspect in the shooting, a self-described anti-fascist, was killed the following week by law enforcemen­t as they tried to arrest him in Washington state.

The Proud Boys mentioned Danielson in their permit applicatio­n, as well as Kyle Rittenhous­e, the 17-yearold charged in the shooting deaths of two Black Lives Matter protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Some attending Saturday's rally carried signs that said "Free Kyle Now."

Rittenhous­e's attorneys have said he was acting in self-defense.

 ?? AP Photo/Allison Dinner ?? ■ Members of the Proud Boys and other demonstrat­ors rally on Saturday in Portland, Ore.
AP Photo/Allison Dinner ■ Members of the Proud Boys and other demonstrat­ors rally on Saturday in Portland, Ore.

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