July 31, 2019 Page 5 Masked Up for Protest C ontinueD from f ront ty Law Center known to strike up violent conflicts in Portland, and left-wing counter protestors known as antifascists or Antifa clashed last month, bloody fist fights broke out during what po- lice called a “civil disturbance.” Three arrests were made and sev- eral injuries reported. Video footage of conservative writer Andy Ngo getting assault- ed and pelted with milkshakes from what appeared to be mask- clad Antifa sparked nationwide backlash and criticism of Portland Police Bureau and Mayor Ted Wheeler. Outlaw proposed making a law making it illegal to wear a mask while a crime was being commit- ted to help reduce the violence at future protests. “Legislation would really be helpful prohibiting the wearing of masks during the commission of a crime…If you knew that you can be easily identified, do you think you would be as inclined to com- mit that act of violence or commit that crime personally?” Outlaw asked at a press conference a few days after the clash. Haynes told the Portland Ob- server that he wouldn’t have a problem with police implementing a mask ban for people committing crimes, but urged that such a pro- posal should not “impinge upon the rights of citizens to march and to peacefully assemble for their grievances.” “We would’ve not had the 1964 Civil Rights bill, the ‘65 Civil Rights bill, the end to Jim Crow, without marches and pro- tests,” he explained. John Parry, a professor of law and associate dean at Lewis and Clark Law School, said he under- stands the frustration the police have in terms of quelling the vi- olence at protests and agreed that “the best way to do it, if you’re going to do it, would be to specifi- cally link the mask wearing to the commission of some other crime, and perhaps a crime of some seri- ousness.” Parry, who teaches courses on civil litigation, noted he does not consider himself a specialist in First Amendment rights issues but agreed any legal problems that could arise from a hypothetical law banning masks when a crime was being committed would cer- tainly be due to free speech issues. “The way in which you choose to present yourself in public is certainly a form of expression… And if we start criminalizing that we’re going to have to be awfully careful of how we tailor that in a way that gets at the specific prob- lem that we’re trying to address,” he said. Though Parry acknowledged the rationale that wearing a mask may make a perpetrator “more emboldened to assault someone,” he questioned the practicality of such a law. “If I break the law by wearing the mask, the fact that the law is there doesn’t make it any easier for them to find me. I’ve worn the mask; yes I’ve broken this addi- tional rule, but good luck finding me.” Parry also acknowledged that the proposal as it’s been stated so far is quite vague, and that a hypo- thetical law banning the wearing of a mask during a crime could manifest in a myriad of different ways. If it were a state statute, for instance, the determination would have to be made as to whether the law was carried out as an aggra- vating factor for sentencing or as an additional violation added on to some other offense, he said. Prior court rulings of mask bans have been mixed. For example, an anti-mask statute in Georgia, originally created as an anti-Klan law, was recently upheld in a case where a man wore a “V for Ven- detta” mask to a protest in Atlanta in 2014, related to a grand jury’s decision in a police-shooting case in Ferguson, Mo. On the other hand, a federal court in Indiana struck down one of its anti-mask laws in 1998 in a case that involved the Klan chal- lenging a Goshen city ordinance barring the use of masked hoods. The U.S. District Court judge rul- ing in that case stated that the law had the effect of “directly chill- ing speech” by infringing on the group’s right to associate anony- mously. Sierra Ellis, a spokesperson from Mayor Ted Wheeler’s of- fice, told the Portland Observer via email that the Mayor has been talking with Chief Outlaw about her concerns, but has not yet taken a position on the masks. “We need to learn more about the implications of it. We’d also like to get community leaders to weigh in,” Ellis said.