Skip to main content

Federal Agents Strike Portland Reporter With Projectile Hours After Judge Issues Restraining Order to Protect Journalists


A federal judge in Oregon on Thursday afternoon issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) prohibiting federal officers deployed in Portland from using physical force against news reporters and legal observers documenting the ongoing protests and riots in that city. However, just hours after the ruling, video emerged showing federal troops firing teargas projectiles at — and ultimately hitting — a local journalist with Oregon Public Broadcasting who was recording the ongoing conflict. Following weeks of unrest, several newspapers and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) last month filed a lawsuit seeking to prevent federal officers from “assaulting news reporters, photographers, legal observers, and other neutrals who are documenting the police’s violent response to protests over the murder of George Floyd.” In the 22-page temporary restraining order, U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon enjoined officers from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), and all agents and employees acting under the direction of the federal government from “arresting, threatening to arrest, or using physical force directed against any person whom they know or reasonably should know is a Journalist or Legal Observer” unless they have probable cause to believe the individual committed a crime. Simon further explained that federal officers will not be liable for violating the order if journalists are “incidentally exposed” to crowd-control devices after the federal agents have issued “an otherwise lawful dispersal order.” But despite Judge Simon’s TRO, a video of the demonstrations posted to social media Friday morning appears to show federal officers firing and hitting a local reporter with tear gas projectiles. The clip, recorded and posted to social media by Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB) general assignment reporter Rebecca Ellis, shows a line of federal officers in the street marching toward Ellis from approximately one block away. The approaching officers stop approximately 30 yards from where Ellis is standing as a series of whistles begin to sound off. Seconds later, the officers launch at least three projectiles in the direction of Ellis, with one hitting her directly in the hand, knocking her camera to the ground. Here’s the recording: Feds approaching and just got shot in hand trying to film. Don’t think that TRO worked pic.twitter.com/L2kIEZPDWw — Rebecca Ellis (@Rjaellis) July 24, 2020 “Feds approaching and just got shot in hand trying to film. Don’t think that TRO worked,” Ellis, who had been meticulously documenting the protests for days, wrote in a Twitter post accompanying the video. Ellis later confirmed to an OPB colleague that she was able to walk away from the incident: “very okay!” she replied on Twitter. Yes yes very okay! — Rebecca Ellis (@Rjaellis) July 24, 2020 It is unclear from available photos and videos of the incidents how Ellis was adorned or what type of gear she was carrying. For the TRO to stick against federal authorities, they must “know or reasonably should know” the person they’re attacking is a reporter. Oregon Public Broadcasting has not responded to a Law&Crime email seeking comment and clarification. [image via YouTube/CBS screengrab] [Editor’s note: This report has been updated clarity.] Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Biden says K-12 education isn't working — calls for free pre-K to "grade 14"

President Joe Biden on Wednesday praised the nation's K-12 education system for fueling America's economic growth for almost a century. But, he stressed, that system may no longer be sufficient as the foundation for future prosperity. Mr. Biden's American Families Plan is taking aim at an issue that has bedeviled economists as well as millions of families struggling to stay afloat financially: A high school diploma is no longer enough to secure a middle-class life. Under the White House proposal, the nation's K-12 system would be expanded on both ends — from free pre-kindergarten education through a "grade 14," funding two years of schooling before kindergarten and two years of post-high school education through free community college. There's plenty of economic research that links rising high school graduation rates throughout the 20th century to faster U.S. economic growth. For example, broadening education help women enter the workforce and enabled men ...

In Trump Farm Bailout, Top 1% Reaped Nearly One-Fourth of Aid

LISTEN TO ARTICLE 4:43 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share Tweet Post Email Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg The Trump administration’s farm bailouts steered an expanding share of subsidy payments to the nation’s biggest farms, according to an analysis by an environmental advocacy group that highlights issues of equity as the Biden administration designs potential new climate-related financial incentives for farmers. Just 1% of farm aid recipients collected 23% of subsidy payments in 2019, up from 17% in 2016, as former President Donald Trump’s trade bailout swelled payments to farmers. Their portion crept up to 24% in the first half of 2020, the most recent period covered in the data, as farm aid hit a record level with coronavirus relief payments, according to the Environmental Working Group analysis. That is the largest share of federal farm subsidies going to the top 1% -- the 7,873 subsidy recipients who got the highest payments -- since 2007, accordi...

Hundreds of Trump supporters stuck in the cold for hours when buses can’t reach Omaha rally

The buses, the huge crowd soon learned, couldn’t navigate the jammed airport roads. For hours, attendees — including many elderly Trump supporters — stood in the cold, as police scrambled to help those most at-risk get to warmth. At least seven people were taken to hospitals, according to Omaha Scanner, which monitors official radio traffic. Police and fire authorities didn’t immediately return messages from The Washington Post early Wednesday and declined to provide reporters on the scene with precise numbers of how many needed treatment. The Trump campaign said it had provided enough buses but that traffic on the two-lane road outside the airport was throttled to one direction after the rally, tweeted Aaron Sanderford, a political reporter at the Omaha World-Herald. The campaign didn’t immediately respond to a message from The Post early on Wednesday. AD AD The confusion and the freezing weather added to the health risks that accompany every Trump rally during the novel coronavirus p...