Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Portland, Ore., protesters defy police

- MARTHA BELLISLE AND GILLIAN FLACCUS

PORTLAND, Ore. — Rioters in Portland, Ore., defied police orders to disperse and threw rocks, frozen or hardboiled eggs and commercial-grade fireworks at officers as unrest continued early Saturday.

Some demonstrat­ors also filled pool noodles with nails and placed them in the road, causing extensive damage to a patrol vehicle, police said. Oregon State Police worked with Portland officers to clear the protesters.

“Officers are having rocks and chunks of concrete thrown at them,” police said on Twitter. “Individual­s in the crowd are shining lasers trying to blind officers.”

Since George Floyd was killed in Minneapoli­s, protests over racial injustice and police brutality have occurred in Portland nightly for 70 days.

Police declared an unlawful assembly Friday night at the Penumbra Kelly public safety building, ordering everyone in the area to leave. Authoritie­s had previously warned people not to trespass on the property.

Protesters and rioters remained for several hours before officers began to push the crowd away from the building using crowd-control munitions early Saturday. Several people were arrested, police said.

“As arrests were made, certain crowd members began throwing rocks towards officers,” police said in a statement. “As this criminal activity occurred, the crowd also blocked all lanes of traffic on East Burnside Street, not allowing vehicles to pass by. Several people in this group wore helmets and gas masks as well as carried shields.”

Most of the crowd left the area by about 2:30 a.m. Saturday, police said.

Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler said this week the violent protesters are serving as political “props” for President Donald Trump in a divisive election season where the president is hammering on a law-and-order message.

The chaos started Thursday night and lasted into Friday morning in a residentia­l neighborho­od about 6 miles from downtown. The demonstrat­ions this week had been smaller than the crowds of thousands who turned out nightly for about two weeks in July to protest the presence of U.S. agents sent by the Trump administra­tion to protect a federal courthouse that had become a target of nightly violence.

This week’s clashes have, however, amped up tensions after an agreement last week between state and federal officials seemed to offer a brief reprieve.

The deal brokered by Democratic Gov. Kate Brown called for agents from Customs and Border Protection, the U.S. Marshals Service and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to pull back from their defense of the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse starting July 30.

Early Friday, as peaceful demonstrat­ions proceeded elsewhere in the city, a group of people gathered at a park in eastern Portland and marched to the local police precinct, where authoritie­s say they spray-painted the building, popped the tires of police cars, splashed paint on the walls, vandalized security cameras and set a fire in a barrel outside the building. One officer was severely injured by a rock, police said, but no details were provided.

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