The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Governor beefs up nightly patrols after fatal shooting

Oregon state police will patrol Portland’s nightly protests with help from officers from neighborin­g communitie­s, seeking to tamp down on vandalism and violence following the fatal shooting of a right-wing Trump supporter as the city approaches 100 consec

- Gillian Flaccus, Associated Press

What’s happening

The plan to end violence, announced late Sunday by Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, also creates a group including Mayor Ted Wheeler and local Black leaders to help chart the path forward for Portland, a liberal city struggling to regain its footing under a national spotlight.

President Donald Trump has made Portland and its Democratic leadership a frequent target and the centerpiec­e of his “law and order” reelection campaign theme. He demanded that local and state leaders call in the National Guard after Saturday’s fatal shooting.

About Saturday’s shooting

A supporter of the rightwing group Patriot Prayer was killed amid skirmishes between Trump supporters who led a car caravan through the city and Black Lives Matter protesters who had gathered for another night of demonstrat­ions.

Police have not made an arrest in the case. The victim was identified by the founder of Patriot Prayer as Aaron “Jay” Danielson of Portland.

“Portland is a mess, and it has been for many years. If this joke of a mayor doesn’t clean it up, we will go in and do it for them!” Trump tweeted Monday, a day after tweeting that the mayor was a “fool” and a “weak and pathetic Democrat mayor.”

Brown has so far declined to send the National Guard to Portland but instead announced a coalition of multiple law enforcemen­t agencies to handle the short-term crisis. In a statement, she said right-wing groups like Patriot Prayer had come to Portland “looking for a fight” and vowed to stop more bloodshed on the city’s streets.

“We all must come together — elected officials, community leaders, all of us — to stop the cycle of violence,” she said. “But this is only the first step. Real change will come from the hard work to achieve racial justice. And it starts with all of us listening to each other and working together.”

Some Black community leaders were upset with the plan to put more officers on the streets. Portland police have come under fire for using tear gas against protesters and have been criticized for being overly aggressive.

“If you’re just there, the odds of getting arrested at this point are almost so high as to the point of being guaranteed,” said Shanice Clarke, one of the founders of the Black Millennial Movement and a frequent protester.

Clarke also criticized a news conference held by Wheeler on Sunday, when he engaged directly with Trump in what she called “political theater.”

The mayor needs to do more than “just showing up to a press conference and saying it’s Trump’s fault” for Black people to feel they are being listened to in Portland, she said.

What happened previously

Many of the Black Lives Matter protests in Portland have ended with vandalism to federal and city property, including the federal courthouse and City Hall. In July, Trump sent more than 100 federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security to safeguard federal property — a move that instead reinvigora­ted the protests.

Thousands of people clashed with the federal agents each night for two weeks.

Oregon state police were at protests Sunday night, supporting Portland police. Authoritie­s arrested 29 people and declared an unlawful assembly.

 ?? ASSOCATED PRESS FILE, SEAN MEAGHER / THE OREGONIAN VIA AP ?? The plan to end violence, announced Sunday by Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, also creates a group including Mayor Ted Wheeler (right) and local Black leaders to help chart the path forward for Portland, a liberal city struggling to regain its footing under a national spotlight.
ASSOCATED PRESS FILE, SEAN MEAGHER / THE OREGONIAN VIA AP The plan to end violence, announced Sunday by Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, also creates a group including Mayor Ted Wheeler (right) and local Black leaders to help chart the path forward for Portland, a liberal city struggling to regain its footing under a national spotlight.
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