The BulleTin • Thursday, april 22, 2021 A3 GEORGE FLOYD MURDER | FALLOUT IN PORTLAND AND BEYOND Protest turns violent night after verdict BY FEDOR ZARKHIN The Oregonian Portland Police declared an unlaw- ful assembly Tuesday and arrested at least two people amid a demonstra- tion held after jurors convicted former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd. Floyd’s death in May ignited nearly a year of protests, rioting and political unrest in Portland, and it thrust the issues of police violence and systemic racism into the middle of a tense na- tional conversation. A crowd initially gathered near the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse and Multnomah County Justice Cen- ter on Tuesday evening, and some be- gan spray-painting the latter building about 9 p.m. A group of roughly 60 began marching about 9:45 p.m., while about 25 other people remained near the courthouse and justice center. Some demonstrators broke a num- ber of downtown windows, according to police, who declared an unlawful assembly at roughly 10 p.m. About that time, an officer and pro- tester engaged in a heated confron- tation. Another officer arrived on a bicycle, pushing a different nearby protester. That protester then punched the first officer, and police piled on the person who threw the punch in flurry of physical confrontation captured on video by an Oregonian journalist. A different video of the flurry shows an officer throwing repeated punches. Police said officers arrested two peo- ple during the protest and that they used pepper spray against one of them. The events came after Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler declared a 24- hour state of emergency earlier Tues- day, allowing him to impose a curfew, close city streets and take other ex- traordinary measures should wide- spread political unrest erupt. The mayor also said the city would have the state police and National Guard on standby, while Portland po- lice received assistance from the Mult- nomah County Sheriff’s Office and other law enforcement agencies in the metro area. Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian Police officers took to Portland’s streets Tuesday, the day Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murder and manslaughter in Minneapolis. The killing of George Floyd sparked almost a year of racial justice protests in Portland and elsewhere. Portland Police declared an unlawful assembly Tuesday and arrested at least two people. Sweeping federal probe into Minneapolis Police underway The U.S. Justice Department is opening a sweeping investigation into policing practices in Minneapolis af- ter a former officer was convicted in the murder of George Floyd there, At- torney General Merrick Garland an- nounced Wednesday. The department was already inves- tigating whether Derek Chauvin and the other officers involved in Floyd’s death violated his civil rights. Garland “Yesterday’s ver- dict in the state criminal trial does not address potentially systemic policing issues in Minneapolis,” Garland said. The new investigation is known as a “pattern or practice” — examining whether there is a pattern or practice of unconstitutional or unlawful polic- ing — and will be a more sweeping re- view of the entire police department. It could result in major changes. Minneapolis’ police chief said he will cooperate with federal prosecutors. — Associated Press Federal report: Agents sent to summer protests lacked training BY MAXINE BERNSTEIN The Oregonian The U.S. Department of Homeland Security had authority to send federal officers to Portland to protect the fed- eral courthouse, but not all officers had completed required training, had the necessary equipment or used con- sistent uniforms, munitions or tactics, a final report from the department’s inspector general says. Homeland Security lacked a com- prehensive strategy. Not all officers were trained to respond to riots or on crowd control. Some federal agents even questioned their own involve- ment in the Portland operation due to their lack of training, according to the report made public Wednesday. Radio communication between fed- eral agents from different agencies was poor, and different federal officers had inconsistent annual certification train- ing for their use of less-lethal weapons. “Without the necessary policies, training and equipment, DHS will continue to face challenges securing Federal facilities during periods of civil disturbance that could result in injury, death and liability,” the report said. The findings reflect many of the allegations made in multiple lawsuits filed against the Homeland Security department since former President Donald Trump sent agents from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforce- ment and U.S. Secret Service to bol- ster Federal Protective Service work- ers at the courthouse in July after some demonstrators on July 3 tried to barricade the front doors of the court- house and they shattered. Between June 4 and Aug. 31, 2020, 755 federal officers were sent to Port- land at various times from the federal agencies, according to the report. The inspector general’s office ex- amined one day for example, Aug. 7, 2020, and found that of 22 officers de- ployed to Portland, 36 did not appear on a training roster showing they had received a legal briefing on their au- thority or the criminal laws they could enforce on federal property. Fourteen of the 36 officers in this examination who did not receive the training used less-lethal munitions against people in Portland, increasing the department’s liability, the report said. “Deploying officers who are not properly trained increases the risk of officers acting outside of their author- ity,” the report said. In a review of 63 officers, only seven had received riot or crowd-con- trol training, according to the inspec- tor general’s office. In interviews and survey responses, many officers iden- tified a need for more such training. Under use-of-force policies govern- ing ICE, Customs and Border Protec- tion and the Federal Protective Ser- vice, officers are required to complete an initial certification for each less-le- thal device used. Federal officers in Portland used compressed air launch- ers, 40-mm munition launchers and pepper-ball launchers for crowd con- trol, the report said. Recommendations The inspector general’s office made two recommendations, urging the Homeland Security secretary to adopt a plan, policy and process to improve federal response to future civil dis- order at federal buildings that would address training, equipment, tactics and policies. It also recommended the Federal Protective Service create plans with state and local law enforcement on how to work together to respond to such civil disturbances at high-risk federal buildings. Homeland Security agreed with the first recommendation and said it would work on adopting a policy doc- ument for designating its federal offi- cer for civil disturbance assignments at federal buildings. It will include verification of required legal training for officers, a public order policing di- rective, additional training, procure- ment of equipment. The Federal Protective Service also agreed to develop a plan for respond- ing to civil disturbances at federal buildings, and estimated it would be completed by March 31, 2022. May 18, 2021 Special District Election VIRTUAL CANDIDATE FORUMS SLATE! City Club of Central Oregon and the League of Women Voters of Deschutes County have partnered to bring you candidate forums. Video production by Connect Central Oregon. These virtual forums are FREE to the public. Forums are pre-recorded. SUBMIT QUESTONS! We encourage you to send questions for the candidates at info@cityclubco.org or info@lwvdeschutes.org NEW! Redmond and Bend-Lapine School Districts Forums will have English to Spanish translation! WATCH! LWV of Deschutes home page: LWVDeschutes.org/ City Club C.O. YouTube: youtube.com/c/CityClubofCentralOregon Find more information here: LWVDC calendar: https://lwvdeschutes.org/events/ Create your own voter pamphlet at Vote411.org! • April 22, 5:30pm: Admin. School Dist. 1, Bend-La Pine School Board zones 1,2,4, 7 • April 24, 5:30 pm: Deschutes Public Library District, Library Board zone 3 • April 27, 5:30pm: Bend Metro Park & Recreation District, Board positions 3,4,5 • May 3, 5:30pm: Redmond School District 2J, School Board positions 3, 4 • May 4, 5:30pm: Redmond School District 2J, School Board positions 1, 2 • May 6, 5:30pm: Redmond Area Park & Recreation District, Board positions 1, 2 * Thank you to our Sponsors! *