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'We Will Not Retreat': Homeland Security Vows Continued Federal Response To Protests

Department of Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad Wolf, speaks during a news conference to address the situation in Portland, Ore., in relation to protests Tuesday, July 21, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Department of Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad Wolf speaks during a news conference to address the situation in Portland, Ore., on Tuesday, in Washington.

The acting head of Homeland Security defended the controversial deployment of federal agents to Portland, Ore., saying the Trump administration would "not retreat" from its duty to protect federal property.

At a news conference on Tuesday, Chad Wolf insisted that the department "will support and protect those who want to peacefully protest."

However, he said "what is occurring in Portland in the early hours of every morning is not peaceful protesting," adding that individual protesters "are organized and they have one mission in mind: to burn down or to cause extreme damage to the federal courthouse and to law enforcement officers."

He said the agents were there to protect federal property, particularly the Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse, which has been the focus of some of the protests.

"We will not retreat," Wolf said.

Federal officers have arrested 43 people in Portland since July 4, according to DHS.

The protests in Portland and dozens of other cities were sparked by the May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

A decision by President Trump to send federal agent into the streets of Portland has been met with stiff criticism – especially in light of allegations that federal officers in unmarked vehicles have arrested protesters. Last week, Homeland Security Acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli acknowledged to NPR that federal agents had used unmarked vehicles to pick up people in Portland.

Wolf, speaking generally, characterized criticism of the federal officers' actions as "smear attacks" and "disgusting."

He said that Customs and Border Protection officers deployed in Portland are "highly trained officers ... in multi-camouflage wear because they work on the southwest border and they work in an environment that demands that," he said.

"That is their everyday uniform, and it is completely appropriate," he said. "They have insignia on their uniforms that read 'police,' and they have patches ... that indicate which agency they are from."

"These police officers are not storm troopers. They are not Gestapo," he said.

In the wake of the arrests by federal agents, several lawsuits questioning the administration's authority to use broad policing have been filing, challenging the move on constitutional grounds.

The state's attorney general, Ellen Rosenblum, a Democrat, sued the federal government last week and the mayor of Portland, Ted Wheeler, also a Democrat, has called on federal troops to leave.

Wheeler told NPR over the weekend that his appeal had been rejected by Wolf.

"[He's] basically told us to stuff it," the mayor said, adding that the incidents of protesters engaging in criminal activity had started to dissipate until federal agents arrived.

"[It] blew the lid off the whole thing," he said.

Meanwhile, the president threatened Monday to deploy federal agents to other cities.

"We're looking at Chicago, too. We're looking at New York," he said. "All run by very liberal Democrats. All run, really, by the radical left."

After initially threatening to sue the administration if it tried to deploy agents to Chicago, the city's Mayor Lori Lightfoot, said Tuesday that the city would be working with the federal government, according to the Chicago Tribune.

She said that city and federal law enforcement would be working "collaboratively," but warned that she would respond to any abuses.

"I don't put anything past this administration, which is why we will continue to be diligent and why we will continue to be ready," Lightfoot said. "If we need to stop them and use the courts to do so, we are ready to do that."
Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.