Portland Police Criticized for Charging Counterprotesters at Patriot Prayer Rally
Police in Portland, OR are facing criticism for their handling of a white supremacist rally on Saturday organized by the extremist groups Patriot Prayer and Proud Boys. Four people were arrested and several were injured, but the scale of violence was considerably less than many had expected.
The white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups—totaling about 400, according to media reports—were confronted by a coalition of about 1,000 counterprotesters, including antifa, Social Democrats, clergy, and community groups, at a riverfront park, and as the march progressed, police kept the two sides apart by moving down the middle of a four-lane boulevard.
But police dressed in riot gear moved to break up the afternoon rally by charging counterprotesters and deploying dozens of “flash bang” devices and tear gas, after claiming that the cops had been hit with bottles, rocks, and other projectiles. Some of the counterdemonstrators disputed that claim. One woman was taken to the hospital with a fractured arm after being struck with a “flash bang” grenade.
“[T]he first missile I saw and heard came from the Patriot Prayer side, across the street, towards the protesters,” Portland photographer Doug Brown told The Guardian.
According to The Guardian:
Eric Ward, executive director of civil rights organization Western States Center, said that while he believed some counterprotesters made some “bad decisions” by bringing weapons, the police charge “punished every counterprotester for the actions of a few”.
This collective punishment, he said “doesn’t align with the treatment of the Proud Boys and [Patriot Prayer leader] Joey Gibson”.
Gibson had earlier told the Patriot Prayer group that a deal with police meant that they would not be searched in exchange for confining themselves to a barricaded area. No weapons searches were carried out on the Patriot Prayer group.
The police tweeted their justification: