Portland police supervisors are expected to testify in federal court that federal officers outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland fired tear gas, pepper balls, and smoke canisters in the past month, including an incident in which a Portland police officer was struck by pepper balls. After Portland police confronted federal law enforcement about aiming at and striking their officer, federal officials responded that local police should âhelp or get out of the way,â Portland police reported.
The testimony is scheduled as a trial begins Wednesday before U.S. District Judge Karin J. Immergut in a lawsuit brought by Oregon, the city of Portland, and California challenging President Donald Trumpâs Sept. 27 mobilization and attempted deployment of National Guard troops to Portland. Plaintiffs seek a permanent injunction barring deployment and argue the administration has not met the statutory criteria under Title 10, Sec. 12406. Federal lawyers argue local police have been âunhelpfulâ and that federal officials need protection for the South Waterfront facility amid ongoing protests and property-security incidents. The 9th Circuit has ordered en banc review of Immergutâs Oct. 4 temporary order barring federal control of Oregon Guard members in Portland.