Protesters gather for anti-ICE ‘Block Party' outside federal facility in South Portland
PORTLAND, Ore. () — Federal agents deployed flash bangs and pepper balls during a protest that gathered outside the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in South Portland late Tuesday night.
The development comes after the presence of ICE agents in Portland, as well as Oregon overall, was a major point of discussion at a city meeting that drew much public interest earlier in the evening at City Hall two miles away.
This comes after weeks of demonstrations outside the ICE facility in South Portland, an area of the city that was once again the site of a massive protest once the Portland City Council meeting wrapped.
Travis Decker may have died evading police
Earlier in the evening, Portland City Councilors discussed what it means for Portland to be a sanctuary city and how that compares with the presence of federal immigration agents.
Members of the public were so interested in the discussion inside City Hall that people filled overflow rooms surrounding it, and protesters even took their signs to the front door and the sidewalk.
City leaders talked about the issue after Portland City Councilor Sameer Kanal added a discussion about immigration and the sanctuary city status to the Portland City Council's public safety meeting agenda.
'This is our first conversation. It won't be our last one,' Kanal said.
Portland City Councilor Angelita Morillo talked about how the ICE facility on South Macadam Avenue has become a complicated issue.
Portland native joins cast of 'Love Island USA'
'I think that we're in a very difficult moment between advocates in the community who are fighting for immigrants and, immigration attorneys who are fighting for immigrants as well, because there are different ideas around what the best material strategy is to help people and we know that with the Macadam building closed down, that a lot of immigrants are not able to make their appointments and are being taken to other federal buildings, their attorneys don't know where they are,' Morillo said.
Morillo added that she 'also personally believe[s] that we need to protect immigrants as much as we can from ICE, and that, frankly, ICE should be abolished.'
On June 14, a during a protest outside the ICE facility. Days later, the building underwent after property damage occurred, including smashed windows and doors and graffiti.
On Tuesday evening, after the city council discussion downtown concluded, a large protest dubbed an anti-ICE 'Block Party' was held a couple of miles away, outside the ICE facility in South Portland. Demonstrators continued their mission of what they call getting 'ICE out of Portland.'
'We're on the sidewalk, we're trying to make an impact here, and instead they're coming at us with severe aggression,' said a protester named Daniela K. 'We need a show of support, to show our local leadership that this matters to so many of us, and this may look like a big crowd, but we need more.'
Former school employee confesses to raping student
Another protester named Helena said she's been there from the start and has created a sign, gradually adding pictures of the people taken into ICE custody, day by day.
'It reminds people why we're here, take the time to actually read their stories,' Helena said, who also attended the Portland City Council meeting earlier in the evening. 'We're just out here, doing what we can, every single day.'
A candlelight vigil is planned to honor those taken by ICE agents Wednesday night at 6 p.m.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
Trump's refusal to enforce TikTok ban is his most lawless presidential act
The first several months of Donald Trump's second presidential term have been marked by controversy and charges that he's a lawless president. However, the most brazen example of Trump's lawlessness is his refusal to enforce the TikTok ban, which has been passed by Congress and upheld by the Supreme Court. On June 19, Trump extended the deadline for TikTok to shut down by another 90 days, marking the third time he has done so. The TikTok ban is the law of the land, and Trump's refusal to enforce it is a dereliction of his duties as president. Those who are silent on it should put aside their own personal motives and bring more attention to this fact. Many forget that a TikTok ban was originally Trump's idea, and that many Democrats wrote the idea off as just another piece of his anti-China agenda. However, things have changed. Trump seemingly developed a soft spot for TikTok because he believes it helped him win reelection. Still, in the time between Trump's original stance and his change of heart on the issue, a law banning TikTok passed the House and Senate and was signed in 2024 by then-President Joe Biden. The Supreme Court even upheld the ban, against the arguments of TikTok's lawyers. The law banning TikTok does have a provision that allows for the president to delay the deadline for TikTok to cease operations or agree to a sale. Still, the criteria allowing for such an extension are nowhere close to being fulfilled. Briggs: Jim Banks would let Trump commit any crime you can imagine The text of the ban allows for the president to extend the deadline a single time for 90 days, so long as TikTok is close to reaching a deal with an American company to sell. There is no indication that's the case, and Trump's arbitrary executive orders are flagrantly illegal. Even Trump's guise in refusing to enforce the law – the idea that he is attempting to give TikTok time to broker a deal − doesn't make sense. Nothing would be more compelling for TikTok to sell the app to an American company than the ban going into effect. An app that cannot run is useless to its owners, and their best course of action would be to sell. The president does not have discretion over which laws he would like to enforce and which he would like to ignore. Trump's decision to arbitrarily extend TikTok's lifespan does exactly that. The president, along with the rest of the executive branch, has an obligation to enforce the laws of the nation that have been passed by Congress and signed into law. A president's job is to enforce the law, whereas Congress' job is to decide what the law is. When a president can choose which laws he is to enforce, he is deciding what the law is, in a sense. Hicks: The middle class isn't disappearing. It's just spending money differently That's why Trump's refusal to enforce the ban is his most lawless action as president. Sure, there's the constitutionality of his deportation schemes and his reinterpretation of birthright citizenship, but those instances had judicial checks. In no other area is Trump as actively derelict in his duties as president without repercussions as he is in relation to the TikTok ban. For all the talk about Trump being a lawless president, Democrats and Republicans have both been relatively quiet about this single worst example of Trump acting as such. Republicans should be wary about the next administration of Democrats that comes along refusing to enforce a certain law because they disagree with it, or they simply don't feel like it. If Democrats were the ones refusing to enforce the ban on TikTok, it would be the only thing Republicans talked about. I'm sure that the outrage would be far louder if Trump were refusing to enforce other statutes, such as parts of the National Firearms Act, the tax code, or any other number of statutes that Democrats are sympathetic to. However, because it concerns a popular social media platform remaining in service, the complaints are rather quiet. Refusal to enforce laws is not a path Americans want our presidents to travel. That slippery slope can take us to some very dangerous places.


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Tens of thousands rally in Serbia's capital to back up their demand for an early vote
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Tens of thousands of opponents of Serbia's populist President Aleksandar Vucic rallied on Saturday in Serbia's capital Belgrade, backing up their demand for an early parliamentary election after nearly eight months of protests that have rattled his firm grip on power in the Balkan country. Tensions have soared before the protest in Belgrade, which has been organized by Serbia's university students, a key force behind nationwide anti-corruption demonstrations that started after a renovated rail station canopy collapsed, killing 16 people on Nov. 1. Many blamed the concrete roof crash on rampant government corruption and negligence in state infrastructure projects, leading to recurring mass protests. Vucic and his right-wing Serbian Progressive Party have repeatedly refused the demand for an early vote and accused protesters of planning to spur violence on orders from abroad, which they didn't specify. Vucic's authorities have launched a crackdown on Serbia's striking universities and other opponents, while increasing pressure on independent media as they tried to curb the demonstrations. The massive showing for Saturday's anti-Vucic rally, however, suggested that the resolve persists despite relentless pressure and after nearly eight months of almost daily protests. Hours before the student-led rally, Vucic's party bused in scores of its own supporters to Belgrade from other parts of the country, many wearing T-shirts reading: 'We won't give up Serbia.' They were joining a camp of Vucic's loyalists in central Belgrade where they have been staying in tents since mid-March. In a show of business as usual, Vucic handed out presidential awards in the capital to people he deemed worthy, including artists and journalists. 'People need not worry — the state will be defended and thugs brought to justice,' Vucic told reporters on Saturday. Serbian presidential and parliamentary elections are due in 2027. Saturday marks St. Vitus Day, a religious holiday and the date when Serbs mark a 14th-century battle against Ottoman Turks in Kosovo that was the start of hundreds of years of Turkish rule, holding symbolic importance. Earlier this week, police arrested several people accused of allegedly plotting to overthrow the government and banned entry into the country, without explanation, to several people from Croatia and a theater director from Montenegro. Serbia's railway company halted train service over an alleged bomb threat in what critics said was an apparent bid to prevent people from traveling to Belgrade for the rally. Authorities made similar moves back in March, before what was the biggest ever anti-government protest in the Balkan country, which drew hundreds of thousands of people. Vucic's loyalists then set up a camp in a park outside his office, which still stands. The otherwise peaceful gathering on March 15 came to an abrupt end when part of the crowd suddenly scattered in panic, triggering allegations that authorities used a sonic weapon against peaceful protesters — an accusation officials have denied. Vucic, a former extreme nationalist, has become increasingly authoritarian since coming to power more than a decade ago. Though he formally says he wants Serbia to join the European Union, critics say Vucic has stifled democratic freedoms as he strengthened ties with Russia and China.


UPI
3 hours ago
- UPI
Families decry conditions inside immigrant detention centers
June 28 (UPI) -- Friends and family members of people detained in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids are raising concerns over conditions inside detention centers in California. One family member reported not being able to meet with his father who is being held at the federal Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles and instead having to leave blood pressure medication for him, CBS News reported. CBS also quoted one immigration lawyer who collectively referred to the Los Angeles facility and others in California being used to detain thousands of people as a "ticking time bomb." Other family members report similar conditions faced by detainees. "She's saying that she's not being fed, that she's sleeping on a concrete floor and that her and a couple of people have to huddle in order to keep warm," Zulma Zapeta told KTLA in an interview about her mother. Zapeta's 41-year-old mother Guadalupe Gutierrez, has been detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center in San Bernardino County, Calif. Zapeta claims she has not been able to provide necessary medication to Gutierrez, who has been in the United States for over two decades and does not have a criminal record. Civil rights attorney Sergio Perez called the situation inside several of the state's federal detention centers "cruel and inhumane," in an interview with KABC-TV. "I saw people waiting for hours, elderly women and men without chairs in a concrete hallway infested with flies, and not receiving any information as to how long it was going to take to view their loved ones," Perez, executive director for the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law, said in the interview. "This year alone, the number of children held for two weeks or longer, as this child and their family was, has increased sevenfold," the center said on Facebook. "Border Patrol runs some of the harshest and cruelest prisons that will never be safe for children -- making every day spent there dangerous." Officials are currently holding around 59,000 immigrants in federal detention centers across the country, CBS News reported this week, citing internal government data. That puts the number of detainees being held at 140% capacity, compared to the 41,500-person figure passed by Congress. Earlier this month, the city of Glendale, Calif., said it was terminating contracts with the Department of Homeland Security and ICE to house federal detainees at local police stations, calling the issue too "divisive." Private prison firm CoreCivic confirmed earlier in the month that it reached a deal with DHS and ICE to convert one of its facilities to house federal detainees. The Nashville-based company is converting its existing detention facility located in California City, in Kern County, Calif. The detention center currently has 2,560 beds for inmates.