President Trump shared a misleading tweet on Tuesday that appears aimed at fueling the administration’s claims that Portland police aren’t intervening forcefully enough in protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building.
In the 1-minute video clip, reposted on X via Trump’s Truth Social account, a Portland police liaison officer speaks with a group of people, including a person in a gas mask and helmet and another in a black bandana face covering, glasses and a red anti-Trump hat.
The officer appears to urge them to move to the sidewalk so traffic can pass through, lest they get hit by a car or get arrested by federal agents.
He mentions a federal judge’s temporary restraining order barring the deployment of National Guard troops in Portland but much of what he says is lost in a cascade of shouts by protesters and counter-protesters that repeatedly interrupt the conversation.
The clip, with the deceptive headline, “Portland PD gives ‘ANTIFA terrorists’ advice on how to keep federal troops out of the city,’ originally was posted Tuesday by the right-wing Phoenix, Arizona-based news and politics website The Western Journal. It’s unclear who recorded the video or when.
The video headline is in keeping with other false information circulating about the city and the Police Bureau for months – including the magnitude of the protests, the level of unrest across Portland and the police response to public disturbances near the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office in South Portland.
Trump’s retweet also comes as the city has been pushing back against federal accusations of political bias. The U.S. Justice Department last week announced that it would launch a wide-scale investigation of the Police Bureau following the arrest of a conservative online journalist and influencer on suspicion of second-degree disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor. The district attorney later declined to press charges, saying Nick Sortor had acted in self-defense but also said police did the right thing in arresting him to deescalate the situation.
Portland police officers do not engage in immigration enforcement efforts due to state and city sanctuary policies that forbid them from doing so – though the police are still responsible for maintaining public safety and enforcing state laws.
On Tuesday, Portland City Attorney Robert Taylor praised the officer in the video for doing his job “to calmly, clearly and professionally de-escalate the situation.”
“This video shows a PPB Dialogue Liaison Officer working to de-escalate a situation and explain the District Court’s recent order,” Taylor told The Oregonian/OregonLive. “De-escalation and providing clear information is important when working with a crowd, especially when people in the crowd are expressing opposing views. We encourage all people exercising their First Amendment rights to do so peacefully.”
Trump and federal officials have regularly accused Portland police of failing to control protests in front of the ICE building and have said Portland is “war-ravaged,” “filled with insurrectionists” and “burning to the ground” – accusations that bear no resemblance to what is actually happening in the city.
The same arguments have also been made by federal lawyers in court when attempting to justify Trump’s directive to send the National Guard to Portland. On Sunday, U.S. District Judge Karin J. Immergut issued a sweeping temporary order that bars any National Guard members from relocating from any state for federal service in Oregon.
Contrary to those claims, the protests in Portland have been confined to roughly a public street intersection and the driveway next to the ICE office in the residential-business district of South Portland – with life going on as usual in all other parts of town.
Most of the protests have entailed just a few dozen people – though a recent rally and march after Trump announced he would send the National Guard to Portland drew hundreds, including families with children and large numbers of elderly residents and veterans.
The protests have been peaceful for the most part. To date, federal officers and Portland police have arrested 68 people at the building on misdemeanor and felony allegations including assaulting officers, destroying government property and failing to follow lawful orders, many of them at the outset of the protests.
Federal officials have dragged dozens more into the ICE building during demonstrations, often releasing them within hours without allegations or citing them with a low-level violation.
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The city dispatches the white shirt-clad liaison “dialogue” officers – such as the one featured in the video – to try to calm crowd behavior during marches and protests with little or no traditional police intervention.