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Portland moves to slow ICE operations after agents shot two people
Summary
Federal immigration agents shot and wounded two people in Portland late last week, prompting large protests and local officials to pledge measures to impede ICE. The Oregon attorney-general has opened a formal investigation into whether the agents used excessive force and lawmakers say they will seek legislative and administrative actions next month.
Content
Federal immigration agents shot and wounded two people in Portland late last week, coming after a separate fatal shooting involving an agent in Minneapolis. The incidents prompted a weekend of protests, rallies and increased local monitoring of ICE activity in the city.
Key facts:
- Police Chief Bob Day said the two people wounded in Portland have "some nexus" to Tren de Aragua and linked them to an open investigation; federal officials had earlier made similar public statements that drew local scrutiny.
- State Attorney-General Dan Rayfield announced his office is opening a formal investigation into whether ICE agents used excessive force.
- Hundreds of people marched and rallied in Portland over the weekend, including medical workers who accused a hospital of co-operating with ICE, and volunteer groups continued to follow and document ICE movements.
- Local elected officials pledged to place hurdles in front of ICE operations. Proposed measures include rules on officer identification, expanded legal remedies for residents, a municipal levy on detention facilities, and fees related to crowd-control chemical use.
Summary:
The shootings have sharpened tensions between federal immigration agents and Portland residents and officials. The state investigation is underway and lawmakers plan to introduce measures when the legislative session begins next month; the ultimate outcome is undetermined at this time.
