The Arizona Republic

Police ‘unlawful assembly’ powers under fire in Ore.

- Andrew Selsky

SALEM, Ore. – As racial injustice protesters swarmed the streets of Portland, Oregon, day after day last year, a voice would come over a police loudspeake­r, announcing they had assembled unlawfully and would be arrested or face tear gas and rubber bullets if they didn’t disperse.

Law enforcemen­t agencies can respond that way under an arcane Oregon law that critics say allows them to violate people’s First Amendment rights to free speech and peaceful assembly. Now, state Rep. Janelle Bynum, a Black Democratic lawmaker, is seeking to repeal the law in this predominan­tly white state.

The push comes after Portland saw more than 100 straight days of sometimes violent protests following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in late May.

Other states have dealt with the issue. In 1971, the Virginia Supreme Court invalidate­d Virginia’s unlawful assembly statute on First Amendment grounds, the ACLU of Oregon said. The court said the law was too broad in banning demonstrat­ors’ intent to use force and violence, even if they did not pose a threat.

Law enforcemen­t has already begun lining up against the Oregon bill sponsored by Bynum, who chairs the House subcommitt­ee on equitable policing and held a public hearing Monday.

“Repealing this statute will eliminate a valuable tool that law enforcemen­t uses to disperse unlawful gatherings and deescalate tensions when violence and threats to community safety become likely,” said Chris Skinner, police chief of the college town of Eugene who testified on behalf of associatio­ns of police chiefs and sheriffs.

He said that without the law, “law enforcemen­t would be forced to wait to respond until violence and criminal activity escalates.”

Supporters of the measure say it shouldn’t be up to police to decide if a protest has the potential to become violent. The law also gives officers the power to arrest people before there’s a crime. The American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon says that because unlawful assembly is not a crime in Oregon, the vast majority of protesters who were arrested were charged with interferin­g with a peace officer.

A version of the law has existed since before Oregon became a state. Before the 1980s, the law was even more draconian, critics say, allowing law enforcemen­t to order bystanders to disperse an unlawful assembly and that failure to do so could result in arrest.

Sheriff’s deputies used that provision in 1984 during protests by environmen­talists against logging in the Willamette National Forest. Protesters blocked a logging road to protest the cutting of trees that they felt should have been preserved as wilderness.

A Linn County deputy sheriff ordered a freelance photograph­er to arrest the demonstrat­ors or face prosecutio­n for a felony. The photograph­er told the protesters they were under arrest. They refused to move, the ACLU of Oregon recalled in 1987 testimony to the Legislatur­e.

“The deputy then ordered the photograph­er to carry the demonstrat­ors to the sheriff ’s van. He refused, and he was arrested,” the group said. Two other people also were arrested after refusing to arrest the demonstrat­ors.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/AP ?? Black Lives Matter protesters march through Portland, Ore., after rallying at the city’s federal courthouse last Aug. 2.
NOAH BERGER/AP Black Lives Matter protesters march through Portland, Ore., after rallying at the city’s federal courthouse last Aug. 2.

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