The federal government plans to appeal U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon’s order barring federal officers from using indiscriminate force against protesters outside Portland’s immigration office, ...
As Portland’s immigration protests have waned, criminal cases stemming from altercations outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility are wrapping up. And in at least one case, the ...
A federal judge in Oregon has restricted federal officers from using tear gas at protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs ...
Coming up: Monday Meltdown on the Portland Patch calendar ...
Protesters shut down SE Hawthorne Boulevard for nearly an hour Sunday as part of an ongoing campaign against the war in Iran ...
A high-stakes courtroom battle is underway in Portland over federal officers’ handling of protests outside the Immigration ...
Ample evidence shows the existence of an unwritten policy” to encourage excessive, unpredictable and indiscriminate force to quash protesters’ rights, the judge found.
Federal agents have once again been ordered to limit the use of chemical munitions near the Portland ICE facility, this time in a case brought by protesters.
A judge is expected to rule as early as next week on whether to extend limits on federal agents’ use of chemical munitions.
The court order limits federal agents’ crowd control tactics and concludes that the use of chemical munitions against largely peaceful protests may violate First Amendment rights ...
Attorneys representing demonstrators pointed to multiple examples they say show excessive force and violations of protected ...
A federal judge restricted federal agents from using chemical munitions at protests at the ICE building in Portland unless ...