Police arrested some rioters in Portland overnight Thursday after they targeted a sheriff’s office and ignored warnings not to trespass on the property.
The group gathered at a park before marching to the Penumbra Kelly Building in southeast Portland around 9:30 p.m. The event was organized by groups linked to Antifa, a far-left, anarcho-communist network.
People blocked the street in front of the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office building and went onto the property despite warnings about facing arrest or crowd control if trespassing.
Others in the crowd hurled rocks and other projectiles at the building, officers, and police vehicles. Some sprayed graffiti on the building.
Just before midnight, officers finally confronted the crowd, making targeted arrests of those who threw rocks, according to an incident summary from the Portland Police Bureau. Two people were arrested: Sean Devlin O'Neill, 29, for criminal mischief and disorderly conduct, and Amanda Lundbom, 37, for interfering with an officer and failure to display a driver’s license.



Video footage showed a car speeding past the crowd, igniting anger. Police officers found the vehicle and cited the driver.
Officers targeted so-called support vehicles, which include vehicles without license plates or with duct tape covering license plates that are positioned across roadways to help rioters shut down streets. Several were cited and one was towed.
The crowd mostly fizzled out by 2 a.m.
“Just tonight they killed our brother Mike,” one man said.
Protests and riots have taken place every night in Portland since May 28.


Earlier Thursday, police officials announced the arrest of Bryan Michael Kelley, 36, who they said was involved in criminal activity around City Hall last week.
Kelley allegedly shined a laser in a police officer’s eyes. He was booked on assault, unlawful use of a weapon, and unlawful directing of light from a laser pointer charges.
“An assault on the police is an assault on the community we are sworn to protect. I commend the officers out there every day and night, and detectives whose follow up makes arrests like this possible. Anyone hiding behind legitimate protests to commit acts of violence should know the investigations keep going even if you get released after your initial arrest,” Police Chief Chuck Lovell said in a statement.
The FBI recently shifted manpower to tackle the continued violence in Oregon’s largest city.
“This policy acknowledges that the factors that lead to the commission of criminal activity during a protest are incredible complex. The protesters are angry, yes, deeply frustrated with what they perceive to be structural inequities in our basic social fabrics. And this frustration can escalate to levels that violate the law,” Schmidt told reporters.
“OSP is not criticizing any officials and we respect the authority of the District Attorney, but to meet the Governor’s charge of bringing violence to an end we will use all lawful methods at our disposal,” a state police spokesman told The Epoch Times this week.