The Western Journal

Multiple Arrests Made as Antifa Extremists Attempt ‘Siege’ on Federal Building

A protest took place in Eugene, Oregon, where antifa and anti-ICE activists attempted to surround a federal building housing the immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office. Beginning around 2 p.m., protesters from Eugene and Portland gathered to pound on doors and windows, harass employees, and write anti-ICE messages. The situation escalated by evening when police intervened, detaining several protesters and pepper-spraying one after objects were thrown at the building. some protesters responded angrily by throwing traffic cones. The authorities reported damage to federal property and assaults on Federal Protective Service agents. This event marked what some commentators described as the first arrests of antifa members labeled as domestic terrorists, following a recent designation of antifa as a terrorist organization by president Donald Trump. The Eugene police have faced scrutiny over their role in ICE-related protests but have been cleared of allegations of improperly assisting ICE during previous demonstrations.


An antifa protest in Eugene, Oregon, that sought to surround a federal office building ended with protesters being arrested.

The protest began at about 2 p.m. Tuesday as Eugene anti-ICE activists, abetted by a group of antifa members from Portland, began pounding on the doors of the federal building, which houses the Immigration and Customs Enforcement office, according to KLCC-TV.

Left to do as they pleased, some protesters harassed employees and called “here, piggy piggy” as others scrawled anti-ICE messages in chalk.

“The domestic terrorist group is posted up at the entrances/exits, pounding on doors and windows. Sources inside say employees are having to find alternative exits,” Post-Millennial journalist Katie Daivscourt wrote in a post on X.

At about 7:30 p.m., police emerged to detain two protesters while pepper-spraying another.

This display of law and order infuriated the remaining protesters. Traffic cones were hurled at the building.

Daviscourt posted video of the arrests, noting “Antifa terrorists and far-left extremists have been attempting to siege the building.”

After a protester threw a road construction sign toward the building, police chased and detained the protester.

Eugene police said protesters threw objects at Federal Protective Service agents and damaged federal property.

Daviscourt offered the comment that the arrests were “the first Antifa domestic terrorist arrests in US history.”

President Donald Trump last week designated antifa as a terrorist organization.

Eugene police had been under a cloud, because Oregon law and city policy forbid helping ICE in any way, according to the Register-Guard.

Police had been accused of supporting ICE during a July 1 protest, but a review said that was not so.

“The evidence clearly shows a police presence at the scene, but this in and of itself is not a violation of the relevant statute, policies, procedures and regulations,” the review said.




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