The U.S. Home committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol by a violent, pro-Trump mob on Tuesday will deal with the previous president’s stress marketing campaign towards state degree officers. The committee’s final scheduled listening to is Thursday.
In hearings to this point, the lawmakers have outlined how they consider the previous president and extremist teams carried out the assault that day. However Jan. 6 was the fruits of years of political violence. Oregon and different states served as a coaching and beliefs testing floor for the teams who would go on to play main roles within the rebel.
Under is a retrospective of some key occasions that present how Oregon was central to escalating political violence main as much as the Capitol assault.
Patriot Prayer
Patriot Prayer, a Vancouver primarily based far-right group shaped in 2016, served as a template for smaller teams across the nation that may perform violent avenue protests focused at an ever-shifting array of cultural points and folks aligned with liberal causes.
Patriot Prayer first rose to prominence by holding a collection of “free speech” rallies in Portland and different West Coast cities within the years following its founding. The group helped heart “Antifa,” a decentralized group of people that oppose far proper extremism, as a leftist bogeyman in far-right psyches. Following the assault on the Capitol, a number of distinguished conservatives — together with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Fox Information’ wildly common conspiracy theorist Tucker Carlson — described the assault as a false flag operation by the FBI or antifascists, fairly than backers of the previous president.
Patriot Prayer’s years of demonstrations have been often met by counterprotests and regularly devolved into violence, serving to cement Portland as a central battleground between the far proper and leftist activists. An estimated 150 Patriot Prayer supporters turned out to a June 2018 demonstration in downtown Portland. Attendees brazenly brawled with leftist counter demonstrators, who federal legislation enforcement shot with much less deadly crowd management munitions.
Joey Gibson, the group’s founder, informed distinguished conspiracy theorist Alex Jones his motive for going to Portland so typically is that the town “is filled with a lot darkness,” calling it one of many worst cities within the nation. That characterization grew to become more and more common within the lead as much as the U.S. Capitol assault, and in 2020 the Trump administration deployed a whole lot of federal officers to violently crackdown on racial justice protests within the metropolis.
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“Make no mistake, this leftwing cultural revolution is designed to overthrow the American revolution,” the twice-impeached former president informed a July 3, 2020 crowd at Mount Rushmore.
Patriot Prayer’s claimed affinity at no cost speech and the Structure has examined the bounds of a justice system that specialists on authoritarianism and felony justice say is ill-equipped to handle the rising risk to democracy within the U.S. That hasn’t stopped prosecutors in Multnomah County from making an attempt.
Numerous Patriot Prayer members have confronted felony fees. Skyler Jernigan, a decrease degree participant, was convicted of illegal use of a weapon and recklessly endangering one other particular person after he fired a gun throughout a downtown Portland demonstration in 2019. In the meantime, Gibson is dealing with felony riot fees for main a violent Might Day avenue brawl with anti-fascists in entrance of Cider Riot in Southeast Portland.
Oath Keepers militia
In 2017, throughout a Portland rally organized by Gibson, members of a militia assisted legislation enforcement from the Federal Protecting Companies in arresting an antifascist counterdemonstrator. The incident was certainly one of many across the nation pointing to a resurgent militia motion changing into extra accepted in conservative circles.
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For years, a militia known as the Oath Keepers, based in 2009 by Military veteran and Yale Legislation Faculty graduate Elmer Stewart Rhodes, prominently led the resurgence. The group recruits individuals with expertise in legislation enforcement and the navy to arrange for what the group characterizes as an inevitable armed battle with the U.S. authorities.
The Oath Keepers have been entrance and heart in a 2015 armed standoff between the Sugar Pine Mine operators and Bureau of Land Administration in Southern Oregon. A frontrunner of the Oath Keepers in Southern Oregon who helped set up at Sugar Pine Mine would go on to run for political workplace in Josephine County in 2016, and function a celebration delegate to help Trump at that yr’s Republican Nationwide Conference.
An OPB investigation final yr additionally revealed greater than two dozen Oregon legislation enforcement officers had joined the Oath Keepers since its founding.
Within the years earlier than Jan. 6, Oath Keepers loved an typically cozy relationship with conservative Oregon politicians, together with county sheriffs, commissioners and state representatives. In 2017, the Multnomah County GOP handed a decision, approving the hiring of Oath Keepers and different militia members as safety for Republican occasions.
The group would go on to play a central function within the rebel. In keeping with a federal indictment, Rhodes and 10 different members reconnoitered the Capitol grounds within the days earlier than Jan. 6, staged an armed fast response power simply outdoors D.C., and have been captured on video sporting tactical gear whereas methodically making their means by means of the gang towards the capitol entrance in a military-style “stack” used to breach buildings.
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Rhodes and 10 others have been charged with seditious conspiracy for his or her function within the assault. Two pleaded responsible, Rhodes and eight others pleaded not-guilty.
Proud Boys
As Portland streets grew to become a extra frequent host for the nation’s violent political proper, the Proud Boys grew to become an more and more widespread presence at rallies within the area. The Proud Boys are a far-right, extremist group that engages in avenue violence. In 2018, a Clark County Sheriff’s Workplace inner investigation revealed for the primary time that the FBI had labeled the Proud Boys as “an extremist group with ties to White Nationalism.”
A Clark County prosecutor confirmed on the time that the FBI had briefed the company.
The investigation was prompted by pictures of former Deputy Erin Willey sporting Proud Boys attire. She was in the end fired for violating the division’s non-discrimination and anti-harassment insurance policies.
“The FBI has warned native legislation enforcement that the Proud Boys are actively recruiting within the Pacific Northwest and that some within the group have contributed to the escalation of violence at political rallies held on faculty campuses, and in cities like Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington,” the report mentioned.
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The FBI briefing got here after a 2018 Patriot Prayer rally in Portland, which was attended by quite a few Proud Boys members. Two months after the briefing, the Proud Boys supplied safety for a Patriot Prayer-led “flash march for Legislation and Order” to disrupt a memorial arrange for Patrick Kimmons, a Black man who had not too long ago been shot and killed by Portland police.
A number of months after that, in January 2019, native Proud Boy Reggie Axtell posted a video threatening Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler, saying his days have been numbered.
“I promise you this, Ted Wheeler: I’m coming for you, you little punk,” Axtell mentioned within the video.
The frequency of Proud Boys coming to Portland elevated because the 2020 presidential election drew nearer.
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In August 2019, Proud Boys from all around the nation descended on Portland for a “Cease Home Terrorism” rally towards Antifa. Main the best way was Joe Biggs, a distinguished nationwide Proud Boys organizer.
Fears of widespread violence on the rally did not materialize within the face of a large legislation enforcement mobilization which appeared extra decided than what the group would face on the Capitol on Jan. 6, although Wheeler’s request to have Nationwide Guard troopers on standby was rebuffed by Gov. Kate Brown.
In August 2020, the Proud Boys confirmed up for a a lot smaller “No Marxism in America” rally instantly in entrance of the Multnomah County Justice Heart. That occasion rapidly unraveled into an hours-long, violent avenue conflict between native Proud Boys and antifascist counter demonstrators. Police have been nowhere to be discovered whereas Proud Boys brandished firearms and infamous member Tusitala “Tiny” Toese — wished for a probation violation stemming from an early assault conviction — paraded brazenly in entrance of police headquarters.
The next month, Biggs introduced a nationwide contingent of Proud Boys again to Portland, this time with nationwide chairman Enrique Tarrio in tow. The rally, which the group claimed would entice crowds within the 1000’s, barely crested 300 individuals and fizzled after about 90 minutes within the face of a large statewide response and huge counterdemonstration. Gov. Kate Brown, taking a sharper tack after a yr of escalating unrest within the state, declared a state of emergency and created a unified command below the Oregon State Police.
After years spent stoking political violence and refining ways in Portland and cities throughout the nation, a federal indictment now claims Biggs was one of many first individuals to enter the Capital on Jan. 6. He and 4 different Proud Boys, together with Tarrio, have been charged with seditious conspiracy for his or her function within the rebel.
The U.S. Division of Justice alleges Tarrio, Biggs and the opposite Proud Boys defendants used violence and a coordinated plan to “forestall, hinder and delay the certification of the Electoral School vote, and to oppose by power the authority of the federal government of america.”
Aligning with authorities
In 2020, the as soon as fringe concepts of the far proper that had been largely unchecked in Oregon grew to become official authorities speaking factors.
That summer season, Performing Secretary of Homeland Safety Chad Wolf slipped into Portland unannounced to denounce the “violent mob” he claimed had laid siege to the town for 47 days.
“Every night time, lawless anarchists destroy and desecrate property, together with the federal courthouse, and assault the courageous legislation enforcement officers defending it,” his assertion mentioned.
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Portland protesters had risen up alongside the remainder of the nation in response to George Floyd’s homicide by the hands of Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.
Seasoned leftist activists and residents who already had a fraught relationship with their police rapidly noticed officers violently crack down on these racial justice demonstrations.
Wolf’s go to got here on the apex of the turmoil. The language he used to explain the town got here from a political playbook that had been refined over years and deployed with renewed vigor in service to Trump’s flagging reelection marketing campaign.
When Wolf visited Portland in July, video streamed out of the town each night time displaying tear gasoline engulfed streets and camouflage clad federal officers from elite tactical items operating roughshod over crowds of mothers, veterans and scores of different protesters.
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Former President Donald Trump’s marketing campaign rapidly repackaged nightly footage in press briefings and marketing campaign adverts, suggesting Democratic-run cities have been anarchic and what voters might count on in Biden’s America.
Propagated by the best ranges of presidency and plenty of in legislation enforcement, by the tip of 2020, a as soon as excessive and paranoid perception had rooted itself in mainstream conservative America.
On the tail finish of the summer season, wildfires broke out throughout the state. Relatively than evacuate, many residents in rural communities simply outdoors of Portland hunkered down, believing rumors that bands of roving antifascist looters had lit the fires deliberately as a pretext to rob their properties. Some legislation enforcement officers working within the evacuation zones promoted the concept.
On the finish of 2020 — two weeks earlier than what lawmakers have known as an “tried coup” on the U.S. Capitol — Oregon was as soon as once more an extremist testing floor.
On Dec. 21, 2020, state Rep. Mike Nearman opened a door to the locked Oregon Capitol constructing, permitting a mob of far proper protesters into the constructing for a confrontation with lawmakers inside debating COVID-19 restrictions. A later investigation discovered Nearman “extra seemingly than not” opened the door on objective.
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Oregon was under no circumstances alone. Within the months main as much as Jan. 6, far-right demonstrators tried to interrupt into the Washington state governor’s mansion and staged an armed takeover of the Michigan statehouse.
Foreshadowing the rebel that may happen in Washington D.C., the demonstrators who breached the Oregon Capitol battled their well beyond Oregon State Police, spraying some with bear mace. At the least three of the individuals in Salem would journey to D.C. for a second try, this time on a bigger stage.
David Anthony Medina, 31, Tim Davis, 59, and Richard Lee Harris, 41, all participated within the Salem and U.S. Capitol assaults.
At the least 11 individuals from Oregon and Washington have been charged for his or her function within the Jan. 6 rebel, together with Harris. Among the many most severe fees introduced towards Pacific Northwest defendants, Oregon Proud Boys member Jonathan Allen Klein and his brother Mathew Leland Klein each face a conspiracy cost.
Prosecutors allege the brothers helped members of a second or third wave of the assault climb a wall to achieve entry to the higher west terrace of the Capitol.
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Matthew Klein additionally confronted fees for carrying a loaded firearm at a September 2020 Proud Boys rally.
The yr earlier than Reed Knox Christensen broke into the U.S. Capitol, he served in a management function on the Washington County Republican Social gathering’s Central Committee. Amongst his fees: partaking in an act of bodily violence within the Capitol constructing.
Father-son duo Jeffrey and Jeremy Grace have each been charged for his or her function within the rebel. Since his arrest, Jeffrey Grace has traveled armed to demonstrations in El Paso, Texas, and downtown Portland.
A choose barred him from possessing firearms in response.
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The perimeter goes mainstream
Regardless of being on the heart of the biggest felony investigation in U.S. historical past, the Proud Boys and different far-right actors have solely turn out to be extra salient in Republican politics. Because the rebel, the Proud Boys’ embattled management are following by means of on a longstanding plan to shift their focus from avenue brawls to native elections.
“I’ve at all times mentioned my aim for this yr … was easy,” Tarrio informed NPR’s All Issues Thought of final June. “Begin getting extra concerned in native politics, operating our guys for workplace from native seats, whether or not it’s a easy GOP seat or a metropolis council seat.”
At the least six present and former Proud Boys presently sit on the Miami-Dade Republican Govt Committee, in response to the New York Occasions. In California, Proud Boy Jeffrey Erik Perrine, who had been ousted by the Sacramento County Republican Social gathering, acquired 5.3% of the vote within the June 7 major for state meeting.
In Oregon, Proud Boy Dan Tooze received practically 40% of the vote within the Republican major for Home District 40 which represents Oregon Metropolis and Gladstone. Adam Baker edged out Tooze for the nomination with 59.7% of the vote.
In California’s Shasta County, a profitable native militia-backed recall marketing campaign towards a Republican county supervisor gave far-right representatives a majority on the county board.
Talking to KQED in January, recalled supervisor Leonard Moty mentioned individuals have been being bullied into silence.
“This feels very a lot to me just like the Nazi Social gathering within the early ‘30s of Germany, the place, you realize, they got here out with their brown shirts and so they intimidated individuals,” Moty mentioned.
Smoke from wildfires is increasingly impacting the Willamette Valley. Here are a few tips to manage poor air quality.
Four Oregon lawmakers are calling on Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to help stop a plan that would kill 450,000 barred owls in an effort to save endangered spotted owls over the next 30 years.
The entrepreneurs were named by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the so-called Department of Government Efficiency.
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In a letter sent Tuesday, state Rep. Ed Diehl, R-Stayton, Rep. David Gomberg, D-Lincoln County, Rep. Virgle Osborne, R-Roseburg, and Sen.-elect Bruce Starr, R-Yamhill and Polk counties, asked the incoming Trump administration officials to stop the reportedly more than $1 billion project, calling it a “budget buster” and “impractical.”
Environmental groups Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy in late 2024 filed a federal lawsuit in Washington state to stop the planned killing of the barred owls.
Here is why the Oregon lawmakers are opposed to the plan, what the plan would do and why it is controversial.
Why the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wants to kill barred owls
In August 2024, after years of planning, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service came up with a proposal to kill a maximum of 450,000 invasive barred owls over 30 years as a way to quell habitat competition between them and the northern spotted owl.
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Spotted owl populations have been rapidly declining due in part to competition from invasive barred owls, which originate in the eastern United States. Northern spotted owls are listed as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species Act.
According to the USFWS plan, barred owls are one of the main factors driving the rapid decline of northern and California spotted owls, and with their removal, less than one-half of 1% of the North American barred owl population would be killed.
The plan was formally approved by the Biden administration in September 2024.
Why environmental groups want to stop the plan to kill barred owls
Shortly after it was announced, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy immediately responded in opposition to the plan to kill barred owls. They argued the plan was both ill-conceived and that habitat loss is the main factor driving the spotted owls decline.
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“Spotted owls have experienced significant population decline over decades,” a news release from the groups filing the lawsuit said. “This decline began and continues due to habitat loss, particularly the timber harvest of old growth forest. The plan is not only ill-conceived and inhumane, but also destined to fail as a strategy to save the spotted owl.”
In their complaint, the groups argued the USFWS violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to properly analyze the impacts of their strategy and improperly rejecting reasonable alternatives to the mass killing of barred owls, such as nonlethal population control approaches, spotted owl rehabilitation efforts and better protections for owl habitat.
Why Oregon lawmakers are asking Musk to stop the plan to kill barred owls
The four Oregon lawmakers are siding with the environmental groups and calling for Musk and Ramaswamy to reverse the federal government’s plan to kill the barred owls. It was not immediately clear how the two could stop the plan.
The lawmakers letter stated the plan was impractical and a “budget buster,” with cost estimates for the plan around $1.35 billion, according to a press release by the two groups.
The letter speculates there likely isn’t an excess of people willing to do the killing for free: “it is expected that the individuals doing the shooting across millions of acres – including within Crater Lake National Park – will require compensation for the arduous, night-time hunts,” according to the press release.
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“A billion-dollar price tag for this project should get the attention of everyone on the Trump team concerned about government efficiency,” Diehl said. “Killing one type of owl to save another is outrageous and doomed to fail. This plan will swallow up Americans’ hard-earned tax dollars for no good reason.”
USFWS says they aren’t trying to trade one bird for the other.
“As wildlife professionals, we approached this issue carefully and did not come to this decision lightly,” USFWS Oregon State Supervisor Kessina Lee said in announcing the decision in August. “Spotted owls are at a crossroads, and we need to manage both barred owls and habitat to save them. This isn’t about choosing one owl over the other. If we act now, future generations will be able to see both owls in our Western forests.”
Statesman Journal reporter Zach Urness contributed to this report.
Ginnie Sandoval is the Oregon Connect reporter for the Statesman Journal. Sandoval can be reached at GSandoval@gannett.com or on X at @GinnieSandoval.
A rebound basket with 3.5 seconds left in overtime allowed Santa Clara to escape with an 82-81 overtime win over Oregon State in men’s basketball Thursday night.
The Beavers, looking for their first road win of the season and their third since 2021, just missed when Tyeree Bryan’s tip-in with 3.5 seconds left was the difference.
Oregon State, leading 81-78, had two chances to rescue the win.
Adama Bal, fouled while shooting a three-pointer with 10 seconds remaining, made his first two free throws but missed the third. But Bal outfought OSU for the rebound, then kicked the ball out to Christoph Tilly, whose three-point shot glanced off the rim. Bryan then knifed between two Beaver rebounders, collecting the ball with his right hand and tipping it off the backboard and into the basket.
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OSU (12-5, 2-2 WCC) came up short on a half-court shot at the buzzer.
The loss spoiled what was a 12-point second-half comeback for Oregon State, which led by as many as four points in overtime.
Parsa Fallah led the Beavers with 24 points and seven rebounds. Michael Rataj had a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds, while Isaiah Sy scored 12 points and Damarco Minor 11.
Elijah Maji scored 21 points for Santa Clara (11-6, 3-1), which has won eight of its last nine games.
The game was tied at 32-32 at halftime following a first half where OSU trailed by as many as 12 points. Fallah and Minor combined to score the final eight points as OSU finished the half on a 10-2 run.
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The game began to get away from the Beavers again as Santa Clara built a 60-48 lead with 9:43 remaining. Sy got OSU going with a three-pointer, as the Beavers whittled away at the deficit. OSU eventually grabbed the lead at 67-65 with 5:19 left on another three by Sy. It was a defensive brawl for the rest of regulation, as neither team scored during the final 1:58.
Oregon State never trailed in overtime until the final three seconds. A Sy three with 1:29 left gave the Beavers a four-point cushion. After the Broncos later cut the lead to one, Fallah’s layup with 17 seconds left put OSU up 81-78.
Oregon State returns to action Saturday when the Beavers complete their two-game road trip at Pacific. Game time is 7 p.m.
–Nick Daschel can be reached at 360-607-4824, ndaschel@oregonian.com or @nickdaschel.
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Mukumoto’s resignation was announced Thursday by Board of Forestry Chair Jim Kelly during a meeting of the board. Mukumoto answers to the board, a citizen panel appointed by the governor that helps oversee and implement forest policy.
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