Update
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

BREAKING: Reports of Federal agents assaulting and abducting peaceful protesters in Portland, Oregon

BREAKING: Reports of Federal agents assaulting and abducting peaceful protesters in Portland, Oregon

By Christopher Armitage/Substack
Oct 01, 2025

Videos of federal agents in military gear near unmarked vehicles are flooding social media, jusr hours after President Trump told 800 generals he wants American cities to serve as "training grounds" for military forces.

"I told Pete [Defense Secretary Hegseth], we should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military. National Guard, but our military, because we're going into Chicago very soon," Trump declared September 30 at Marine Corps Base Quantico, explicitly naming Portland, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York as targets he would "straighten out one by one."

A video posted Tuesday evening shows heavily armed agents in camouflage near Portland's ICE facility. "ICE agents in military gear are now jumping out of unmarked vans to disappear protesters in Portland, OR," reads the Reddit post that drew thousands of views.

Federal presence has surged since Trump announced September 27 that 200 Oregon National Guard troops would deploy over Governor Tina Kotek's objections. She called it "unlawful and unwarranted."

Trump's September 30 Quantico address framed domestic operations as combating "the enemy from within" and announced a "quick reaction force" to "quell civil disturbances." He told assembled military leadership, "We're under invasion from within. No different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in many ways, because they don't wear uniforms." He described Democratic-run cities as "very unsafe places" and declared protecting the homeland from internal enemies the military's "most important priority."

The gulf between federal and local characterizations is stark. The White House released a statement September 30 titled "President Trump Deploys Federal Resources to Crush Violent Radical Left Terrorism in Portland," alleging the ICE facility faces nightly attacks with "battering rams, explosives, and assaults on officers."

Oregon officials contest this sharply. "Portland is doing just fine," Kotek said. Mayor Keith Wilson added, "If President Trump came to Portland today, he'd find people riding bikes, playing sports, enjoying sunshine." Police Chief Bob Day said protests are limited to "one city block" in the 145-square-mile city.

Text messages between Trump and Kotek show the governor fact-checking his allegations with Portland Police, who reported minimal incidents. "You broke your promise to speak with me before taking further action," Kotek wrote.

According to Oregon Public Broadcasting, 100-150 additional agents arrived September 26 with Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles typically used in war zones. Activists report agents in tactical gear on rooftops with rifles and unmarked vehicles throughout the area.

Similar reports have emerged from multiple cities. In Chicago, armed agents patrolled downtown September 28. The next day brought reports of agents in unmarked vans conducting an early morning apartment raid, with agents rappelling from Black Hawk helicopters. Governor Pritzker warned Trump seeks to deploy 100 troops. In Seattle, 50 masked agents raided a workplace in April using unmarked vans, detaining 37 employees in the state's largest Trump-era immigration raid. San Francisco has seen ICE detain at least 26 people exiting immigration hearings since May. On August 8, ICE held two U.S. citizen protesters for 2.5 hours, which attorneys called "unprecedented."

Legal experts and online commenters alike are raising alarm about the constitutional implications. On Reddit, legal professionals debated whether recent Supreme Court decisions have essentially legalized racial profiling. One commenter referenced Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo, writing "The courts upheld ICE's right to arrest people based on traits like ethnicity and language spoken." Another asked, "Did we literally just legalize racial profiling?" The response was simple and stark. "Yes."

To many, the Constitution appears to mean whatever 6 judges say it does, regardless of precedent.

ACLU National Security Project Director Hina Shamsi said Trump's justification is "blatantly false and inflammatory" and represents "an attempt to create conflict where there is none, sow fear, and intimidate people from exercising constitutional rights."

Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield sued September 28 to block deployment, arguing it violates the Posse Comitatus Act, which bars military involvement in civilian law enforcement. His lawsuit calls Trump's "war ravaged" characterization "wildly hyperbolic pretext."

A federal judge ruled September 2 that Trump's Los Angeles National Guard deployment violated Posse Comitatus, finding the administration was "creating a national police force with the President as its chief." Legal scholars note the Insurrection Act permits domestic military deployment only for invasion, rebellion, or inability to execute federal laws. None of those conditions exist in Portland, they say.

Portland's legal battle hits federal court October 4 for a temporary restraining order hearing. The 200 Guard members have a 60-day authorization at $3.8 million cost. Trump signaled expansion in August, saying "Federal law enforcement personnel will soon deploy to other cities," naming Chicago, New York, Baltimore, San Francisco, Oakland.

DHS launched "Defend the Homeland" recruitment with $50,000 sign-on bonuses to expand the agent workforce for what officials call the largest immigration enforcement operation in American history.

Videos circulate. Eyewitness accounts mount. Trump has made explicit his intention to use cities as military training grounds. With the Supreme Court having cleared the path for federal immigration enforcement based on ethnicity and language, all with little to no accountability or due process.

Take Action Now

Federal agents are assaulting peaceful protesters in Portland. Oregon officials can stop it through state criminal prosecution.

Call Attorney General Dan Rayfield: (503) 378-6002

"Federal agents assaulting protesters is criminal assault and kidnapping under Oregon law. You have authority under ORS 180.070 to file state criminal charges. File them now."

Federal agents lose immunity when exceeding authority. State prosecutions deter violence even without convictions. Trump cannot pardon state crimes. Northern states prosecuted federal marshals during slavery. Oregon can do it now.

Outside Oregon? Adapt this for your state's Attorney General. Every state has prosecution authority. The legal framework exists everywhere.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
BigGuy2 · 31-35, M
Oh really ... so there's enough violent protestors to deal but they go after 'peaceful' protestors

Your comments are stemming from people that burn down Federal buildings ... how many DEATHS were caused by the 'peaceful' Left in the BLM/Antifa riots, i believe the final count was EIGHTY TWO