Texarkana Gazette

Oregon, hotbed of extremism, seeks to curb paramilita­ries

- ANDREW SELSKY

SALEM, Ore. — An armed takeover of a federal wildlife refuge. Over 100 straight days of racial justice protests that turned downtown Portland into a battlegrou­nd. A violent breach of the state Capitol. Clashes between gun-toting right-wingers and leftist militants.

Over the past decade, Oregon experience­d the sixth-highest number of extremist incidents in the nation, despite being 27th in population, according to an Oregon Secretary of State report. Now, the state Legislatur­e is considerin­g a bill that, experts say, would create the nation’s most comprehens­ive law against paramilita­ry activity.

It would provide citizens and the state attorney general with civil remedies in court if armed members of a private paramilita­ry group interfere with, or intimidate, another person who is engaging in an activity they have a legal right to do, such as voting. A court could block paramilita­ry members from pursuing an activity if the state attorney general believed it would be illegal conduct.

All 50 states prohibit private paramilita­ry organizati­ons and/ or paramilita­ry activity, but no other law creates civil remedies, said Mary Mccord, an expert on terrorism and domestic extremism who helped craft the bill. The Oregon bill is also unique because it would allow people injured by private, unauthoriz­ed paramilita­ry activity to sue, she said.

Opponents say the law would infringe on rights to freely associate and to bear arms.

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Dacia Grayber, a Democrat from suburban Portland, said the proposed reforms “would make it harder for private paramilita­ries to operate with impunity throughout Oregon, regardless of their ideology.”

But dozens of conservati­ve Oregonians, in written testimony, have expressed suspicion that the Democrat-controlled Legislatur­e aims to pass a bill restrictin­g the right to assemble and that the legislatio­n would target right-wing armed groups like the Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer, but not black-clad anarchists who have vandalized downtown Portland and battled police.

“This bill would clearly put restrictio­ns on who could gather in a group and for what reasons they chose to,” wrote Matthew Holman, a resident of Coos Bay, a town on Oregon’s southwest coast.

The pioneering measure raises a host of issues, which lawmakers tried to parse in a House Judiciary Committee hearing last week: If residents are afraid to go to a park with their children while an armed militia group is present, could they later sue the group? What constitute­s a paramilita­ry group? What is defined as being armed?

Oregon Department of Justice attorney Carson Whitehead said the proposed law would not sanction a person for openly carrying firearms, which is constituti­onally permissibl­e. But if a paramilita­ry group went to a park knowing their presence would be intimidati­ng, anyone afraid of also going to the park could sue for damages, Whitehead said. “This particular bill is not directed at individual­s open-carrying. This is directed at armed, coordinate­d paramilita­ry activity,” added Mccord, who is the executive director of Georgetown University Law Center’s Institute for Constituti­onal Advocacy and Protection.

On the other side of the country in Vermont, a bill making it a crime to operate a paramilita­ry training camp got final approval from the state Senate on Friday. The measure, which senators earlier approved by a 29-1 vote, also allows state prosecutor­s to seek an injunction to close such a facility. “This bill gives the state the authority it needs to protect Vermonters from fringe actors looking to create civil disorder,” said state Sen. Philip Baruth, a Democrat and Progressiv­e from Burlington. Baruth introduced the measure in response to a firearms training facility built without permits in the town of Pawlet. Neighbors frequently complained about gunfire coming from the Slate Ridge facility, calling it a menace. Baruth’s bill now goes to the Vermont House.

Under the proposed Oregon law, a paramilita­ry group could range from ones that wear uniforms and insignia, like the Three Percenters, to a handful of people who act in a coordinate­d way with a command structure to engage in violence, Mccord said.

Rep. Rick Lewis, a Republican from Silverton, asked pointedly during the committee hearing whether rocks and frozen water bottles, which Portland police said had been thrown at them during demonstrat­ions in 2021, would fall under the proposed law. A frozen water bottle and rocks could cause serious injury or death, so they would be considered dangerous weapons under Oregon law, responded Kimberly Mccullough, Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum’s legislativ­e director.

 ?? (AP Photo/alex Milan Tracy, File) ?? Members of the far-right group Proud Boys and anti-fascist protesters spray bear mace at each other during clashes between the politicall­y opposed groups Aug. 22, 2021, in Portland, Ore. Over the past decade, Oregon experience­d the sixth-highest number of extremist incidents in the nation, despite being 27th in population, according to an Oregon Secretary of State report. Now, the state Legislatur­e is considerin­g a bill that, experts say, would create the nation’s most comprehens­ive law against paramilita­ry activity.
(AP Photo/alex Milan Tracy, File) Members of the far-right group Proud Boys and anti-fascist protesters spray bear mace at each other during clashes between the politicall­y opposed groups Aug. 22, 2021, in Portland, Ore. Over the past decade, Oregon experience­d the sixth-highest number of extremist incidents in the nation, despite being 27th in population, according to an Oregon Secretary of State report. Now, the state Legislatur­e is considerin­g a bill that, experts say, would create the nation’s most comprehens­ive law against paramilita­ry activity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States