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Judge temporarily bars ICE from using teargas and projectiles on Portland protesters
Summary
A U.S. district judge issued a 14-day temporary restraining order limiting Immigration and Customs Enforcement from using chemical or projectile munitions at protests outside the Portland ICE building unless there is an imminent threat of physical harm.
Content
A federal judge has temporarily restricted Immigration and Customs Enforcement from firing teargas or projectile munitions at demonstrators outside the ICE building in Portland, Oregon. The ruling follows a weekend in which immigration agents fired chemical and projectile munitions into a crowd that local officials had described as peaceful. The decision was issued after a lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon on behalf of protesters and freelance journalists.
Known facts:
- U.S. District Judge Michael Simon issued a 14-day temporary restraining order that bars federal officers from using chemical or projectile munitions unless the targeted person poses an imminent threat of physical harm.
- The order also limits firing munitions at the head, neck or torso unless an officer is legally justified in using deadly force.
- The lawsuit named the Department of Homeland Security and senior officials and was brought on behalf of protesters and journalists who say they were subjected to such munitions while documenting demonstrations.
Summary:
The court order temporarily restricts certain crowd-control actions by federal officers at the Portland ICE site and remains in effect for 14 days. Undetermined at this time.
