Right-wing leader decries revenge after Portland, Oregon killing
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[September 02, 2020]
By Deborah Bloom and Andrew Hay
PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - The leader of a
Portland group that backs President Donald Trump on Tuesday told
followers not to seek revenge after a supporter was shot dead and
counter protesters celebrated the killing.
The victim, 39-year-old Aaron Danielson, was walking home on Saturday
night after a pro-Trump demonstration in the city when he was shot, said
Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson.
Gibson called for supporters to "push back politically, spiritually"
during escalating violence between right and left-wing demonstrators in
the city which has become a focus of the U.S. presidential race after
months of anti-racism protests.
"We are not going to commit any acts of revenge, we're going to make
sure justice is served," Gibson said in a Facebook Live video, calling
for a memorial event on Saturday.
Gibson, a Christian conservative, said his friend Danielson was not a
"Nazi" or a "fascist" or a "white supremacist," as some had called him,
but "one of the nicest most gentle guys you will ever meet."
"I don't understand where all this hatred is coming from," said Gibson,
who espouses non-violence but is accused by anti-fascist groups of
provoking confrontations.
An online video showed left-wing protesters cheering in Portland on
Saturday night when a woman announced the person killed was a Patriot
Prayer supporter and a "Nazi."
"Our community held its own and took out the trash, I'm not going to
shed any tears over a Nazi," said the unidentified female speaker.
Nobody has been charged in the case yet.
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A police officer removes a barricade erected by demonstrators during
a protest against police violence and racial injustice in Portland,
Oregon, U.S., August 23, 2020. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
Trump has seized on civil unrest in Portland and other cities to
criticize Democratic leaders and call for "law and order" ahead of
the Nov. 3 presidential election.
He visited Kenosha, Wisconsin on Tuesday where police shot a Black
man in the back on Aug. 23 and a 17-year-old gunman shot dead two
people during protests over the killing.
Democratic challenger Joe Biden on Monday said Trump was stoking the
violence.
Portland has seen nightly protests with hundreds of arrests since
the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, in Minneapolis
on May 25.
Acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf on
Tuesday again urged Portland's Democratic mayor Ted Wheeler to
request federal assistance to quell clashes.
Wheeler has rejected a deployment of federal agents.
(Reporting by Deborah Bloom and Andrew Hay; Additional reporting by
Ann Maria Shibu and Daniel Trotta; Writing by Kanishka Singh and
Daniel Trotta; Editing by Paul Simao and Christopher Cushing)
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