The Columbus Dispatch

Riot declared after police kill man in Portland, Ore.

- Sara Cline and Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, Ore. – Police in Portland, Oregon, said Saturday they arrested four people after declaring a riot Friday night when protesters smashed windows, burglarize­d businesses and set fires.

The demonstrat­ions started after police fatally shot a man while responding to reports of a person with a gun. Police said they dispersed the crowd so firefighting crews could douse fires before they spread in extreme fire hazard conditions.

The vandalism downtown was also was part of vigils and demonstrat­ions already planned for the night in the name of people killed in police shootings nationwide. They include 13-yearold Adam Toledo of Chicago and Daunte Wright, a Black man in a Minneapoli­s suburb.

Deputy Police Chief Chris Davis told reporters a white man in his 30s had been shot and killed in Portland by police. The man was pronounced dead at the scene in Lents Park, in a residentia­l neighborho­od.

Two officers fired a 40mm device that shoots non-lethal projectile­s, and one officer – an eight-year veteran – fired a gun, police said in a statement. Police identified that officer as Zachary Delong. He is on paid administra­tive leave, authoritie­s said.

Davis said he did not know whether the man who died had pointed a weapon at the officers and did not say how many shots were fired. A witness at the scene said the man, who had removed his shirt and was blocking an intersecti­on, appeared to be in a mental health crisis, The Oregonian/oregonlive reported.

The police investigat­ion into the shooting was hampered by a crowd of “fairly aggressive people” who showed up at the park within two hours of the shooting. Those arrested could face charges ranging from criminal mischief to assaulting a public safety officer.

There were no reports of injuries to police.

As investigat­ors worked the scene of the shooting and huddled over a covered body, nearly 100 yards away, a crowd of more than 150 people – many dressed in all black and some carrying helmets, goggles and gas masks – gathered behind crime scene tape, chanting and yelling at officers standing in front of them.

“We’ve had to summon just about every police officer in Multnomah County to keep this group far enough away ... to preserve what we refer to in our business as the integrity of the scene, so that nobody who shouldn’t be in there goes in there,” Davis said.

The crowd later marched through the park, ripped down police tape and stood face to face with officers dressed in riot gear. Police left the park around 3:30 p.m., and the crowd eventually stood in a nearby intersecti­on, blocking traffic and chanting.

Police said they had used pepper spray on protesters to keep them away. Some people hit officers with sticks and chased them as they were leaving, police said in a news release. Officers deployed smoke canisters and then used a rubber ball distractio­n device.

Portland has been the site of frequent protests, many involving violent clashes between officers and demonstrat­ors, since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in May.

 ?? DAVE KILLEN/THE OREGONIAN VIA AP ?? Protesters march Friday toward the Hawthorne Bridge in Portland, Ore., after a fatal shooting by police.
DAVE KILLEN/THE OREGONIAN VIA AP Protesters march Friday toward the Hawthorne Bridge in Portland, Ore., after a fatal shooting by police.

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