Ginsberg Wiggle, Portland protests resume after wildfires with more sabotage


Portland protesters – who took a break due to wildfire smoke after more than 100 consecutive days of demonstrations over the past 100 weeks – resumed with a candlelight vigil on Saturday to pay their respects to Ruth Bader Ginsberg before smashing some subsequent shops and smashing store windows.

About 200 people gathered in the South Park blocks near Southwest Jefferson Street and Southwest Park Avenue around 9pm on Saturday night. The Portal Police Bureau said in a press release that they marched on the streets for several hours, “stopped at various places to demonstrate and in some cases damaged property and applied graffiti.” The Portland Police Bureau said in a press release. Some protesters smashed windows on businesses, including banks and restaurants, as seen in photos released by police.

Photos shared on social media showed demonstrators lighting candles in honor of Ginsberg, who died Friday at his home in Washington DC after a battle with pancreatic cancer. His death in the run-up to the presidential election has left the Supreme Court’s seat of justice vacant, allowing President Trump to run for life for the rest of his life before being challenged by Democratic candidate Joe Biden as an alternative to rigorous justice.

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The CGW report said the crowd, which arrived at Solomon’s United States courthouse, was sprayed with graffiti, with the message ACAB, abbreviated to “All Cops Are Bustards.”

The group also marched in front of the Multnomah County Justice Center, where back in July protesters repeatedly threw Molotov cocktails and other weapons at federal officials sent to protect federal property.

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Portland police officers were busy with the crowd at 1:30 a.m. Sunday as they allowed officers to shift to Central Present to move them off Southwest 2nd Avenue in front of the Justice Center. This time, the police bureau said there was “no violence by the mob, so no force or surgery was used by the officers” and the officers were released shortly after their change.

No arrests have been made, police said, adding that an investigation into the vandalism is ongoing.

The move comes after 11 people were arrested in Portland on Friday during protests outside the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Homeland Security offices. The bureau said in another press release that police “declared the assembly illegal and arrested 11 people.”

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler, a Democrat, said early Saturday that the Portland Police Bureau complied with his order to ban tear gas for crowd control on Friday night during a protest in the South Waterfront neighborhood. The mayor and Portland Police Chief Chuck Lovell previously clashed to disperse the crowd during events that endangered the safety of life by using CS, or tear gas.

Earlier Friday, demonstrations in Portland experienced a lull, as heavy fire engulfed an area of ​​1 million acres in O Reagan.

Meanwhile, Attorney General William Barr is urging U.S. attorneys to bring federal charges into protest-related violence whenever they can, citing a Justice Department memo sent to federal lawyers Thursday as a fictitious example, “A group of federal Conspired to take the courthouse or other federal property by force. “

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DOJ officials were also exploring possible criminal or civil charges against local officials in Portland, specifically looking at how the city had been gripping riots and violence for months.