Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rein in U.S. agents, mayors urge

Six cities ask Congress to outlaw unwanted deployment­s

- ANDREW SELSKY AND ARON RANEN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Colleen Long of The Associated Press.

PORTLAND, Ore. — The mayors of six U.S. cities Monday appealed to Congress to make it illegal for the federal government to deploy milita- rized federal agents to cities that don’t want them, even as the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g sending more of them to Portland.

“This administra­tion’s egregious use of federal force on cities over the objections of local authoritie­s should never happen,” the mayors of Portland, Seattle, Chicago, Kansas City, Albuquerqu­e and Washington, D.C., wrote to leaders of the U.S. House and Senate.

Early Monday, U.S. agents repeatedly fired what appeared to be tear gas, flash bangs and pepper balls at protesters outside the federal courthouse in downtown Portland. Some protesters had climbed over the fence surroundin­g the courthouse, while others shot fireworks, banged on the fence and projected lights on the building.

President Donald Trump said Monday on Twitter that the federal properties in Portland “wouldn’t last a day” without the presence of the federal agents.

Homeland Security is considerin­g sending about 50 additional Customs and Border Protection agents to Portland, according to an administra­tion official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter. The plan has not been finalized, and it’s not clear if the officers would be replacing the officers already there.

The Trump administra­tion says the forces are needed in Portland to protect the courthouse and other federal buildings. But the mayors said the officers have patrolled areas distant from the federal properties and arrested citizens without cause.

The mayors said they support legislativ­e efforts to require notice and consultati­on with and consent from local authoritie­s before deployment­s; require visible identifica­tion at all times on federal agents and vehicles unless on an undercover mission authorized by the local U.S. attorney; and impose limitation­s on federal agents’ crowd control activities to protecting federal property.

Some protesters have accused Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler of hypocrisy because he has allowed police to use tear gas and other riot-control weapons on protesters, including peaceful ones.

Demonstrat­ions in support of racial justice and police changes in other cities around the U.S. were hit with violence over the weekend. Protesters set fire to an Oakland, Calif., courthouse; vehicles were set ablaze in Richmond, Va.; an armed protester was shot and killed in Austin, Texas; and two people were shot and wounded in Aurora, Colo., after a car drove through a protest.

On Sunday evening, Portland police responded to a shooting at a park close to the site of the overnight protests. Two people were detained and later released, police said Monday morning. The person who was shot went to the hospital in a private vehicle and was treated for a non-life-threatenin­g wound.

Also late Sunday, police said someone pointed out a bag in the same park, where officers found loaded rifle magazines and Molotov cocktails. The shooting was not related to the items, police said. It was not clear whether the shooting or the material found in the bag were connected to the protests.

The city has had nightly protests for two months since the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in May. Trump said he sent federal agents to Portland to halt the unrest, but state and local officials say the agents are making the situation worse.

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