Portland mayor demands Trump remove federal law enforcement from city

Federal agents in green camouflage uniforms have reportedly arrested and detained protesters

Police stand as protesters gather during a demonstration on Thursday in Portland. Photograph: Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP

The mayor of Portland has demanded US president Donald Trump remove federal law enforcement from the city.

Protests have taken place in the city for nearly two months since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25th.

Federal agents in green camouflage uniforms have reportedly arrested and detained protesters in the city, after being sent solely to protect federal property.

Mayor Ted Wheeler told reporters: “Keep your troops in your own buildings, or have them leave our city.”

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Police gather as protesters gather during a demonstration on Thursday. Photograph: Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP

Democratic governor Kate Brown said Mr Trump is looking for a confrontation in the hopes of winning political points elsewhere and to serve as a distraction from the coronavirus pandemic, which is causing spiking numbers of infections in Oregon and the nation.

Mrs Brown’s spokesman, Charles Boyle, said that arresting people without probable cause is “extraordinarily concerning and a violation of their civil liberties and constitutional rights”.

Federal officers have charged at least 13 people with crimes related to the protests so far, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported on Thursday.

Some have been detained by the federal courthouse, which has been the scene of protests, but others were grabbed streets away.

Mr Wheeler said: "This is part of the core media strategy out of Trump's White House: to use federal troops to bolster his sagging polling data.

“And it is an absolute abuse of federal law enforcement officials.”

One video showed two people in helmets and green camouflage with police patches grabbing a person on the pavement, handcuffing them and taking them into an unmarked vehicle.

“Who are you?” someone asks the pair, who do not respond. At least some of the federal officers belong to the department of homeland security.

The US customs and border protection said in a statement that its agents had information indicating the person in the video was suspected of assaulting federal agents or destroying federal property.

On Thursday night, federal officers deployed tear gas and fired non-lethal rounds into a crowd of protesters.

Portland police chief Chuck Lovell told reporters on Friday that his officers are in contact with the federal agents, but that neither controls the others’ actions.

“We do communicate with federal officers for the purpose of situational awareness and deconfliction,” Mr Lovell said.

“We’re operating in a very, very close proximity to one another ... so it’s important for us to know if they’re going to take some type of action and it’s important for them to know if we’re going to take some type of action.”–PA