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Senior Homeland Security leaders pushed unfounded antifa conspiracy at 2020 Portland protests, report states

Federal law enforcement officers fire impact munitions and tear gas at protesters demonstrating against racism and police violence in front of the Mark O. Hatfield federal courthouse in Portland, Ore., on July 16, 2020.
Jonathan Levinson
/
OPB
Federal law enforcement officers fire impact munitions and tear gas at protesters demonstrating against racism and police violence in front of the Mark O. Hatfield federal courthouse in Portland, Ore., on July 16, 2020.

A damning Department of Homeland Security internal report outlines how senior leadership pushed unfounded conspiracies about antifascists, encouraged staff to violate constitutional rights, and made spurious connections between protesters who engaged in criminal activity during last summer's racial justice protests.

On the same day a violent mob of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol, the Department of Homeland Security received a damning internal report about its intelligence operations targeting racial justice protesters in Portland last summer.

It outlines how senior leadership pushed unfounded conspiracies about antifascists, encouraged staff to violate constitutional rights, and made spurious connections between protesters who engaged in criminal activity.

The report is an internal review focused on the agency鈥檚 Office of Intelligence & Analysis. It shows political appointees at DHS pressured career analysts to further the Trump administration鈥檚 political agenda. The report, made available Friday by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D- Oregon, found that in addition to attempting to politicize intelligence, senior DHS leaders pressured subordinates to illegally search phones. Open source intelligence collectors, who analyze intelligence pulled from publicly available sources, also created dossiers on protesters and journalists, despite those people having no clear connections to domestic terrorism or homeland security concerns.

鈥淭he report documents shocking, coordinated efforts by our government to abuse its power and to invade liberty in violation of the Constitution,鈥 said Lisa Hay, Oregon鈥檚 federal public defender whose office represents protesters charged by the U.S. Justice Department. 鈥淚n Portland, we were concerned that the government unconstitutionally collected information, including through the illegal search of protestors鈥 cellphones last summer. This report confirms that was their intent.鈥

The heavily redacted 76-page internal review, specifically examined open source collection and other intelligence operations in Portland between May 24, 2020 and Aug. 4, 2020.

For more than a month last summer, hundreds of federal law enforcement officers from multiple agencies in response to protests. Few of the officers had been trained in crowd control and the nightly violence became a recurring topic for former President Donald Trump鈥檚 flagging reelection campaign.

The internal review shows the Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 intelligence operations in Portland were heavily politicized by department leadership, lacked clear guidance, and appears to have pushed constitutional boundaries.

The report shows DHS senior leaders鈥 attempts at the time to connect the racial justice protests to a centrally organized effort by antifa to commit violence against government institutions 鈥 a shocking admission of organizational overreach.

鈥淸REDACTED NAME] did make other attempts to controvert the collection-analysis process,鈥 the report states. It goes on to criticize how leadership pushed staffers to describe protests as 鈥淰iolent Antifa Anarchist Inspired,鈥 or VAAI, actions.

Despite those efforts and Trump administration claims, the report says DHS intelligence analysts were unable to prove an ideological conspiracy.

鈥淭his may have made sense to [REDACTED NAME] based on his own beliefs but (the Office of Intelligence and Analysis) did not have collections evidence to show it,鈥 the report states.

While the report says there was no direct pressure to change intelligence, at least one analyst paints a much starker picture.

鈥淵ou could see where this VAAI definition was coming from a mile away,鈥 the analyst is quoted in the report. 鈥淗e got tired of [REDACTED] telling him they did not have the reporting and he was convinced it was ANTIFA so he was going to fix the problem by changing what the collectors were reporting.鈥

An email was sent to DHS senior leaders 鈥渋nstructing them that henceforth, the violent opportunists in Portland were to be reported as VAAI, unless the intel 鈥榮how[ed]...something different.鈥

Throughout the federal deployment to Portland, officers from the Federal Protective Services requested assistance from the Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 Homeland Identities Targeting and Exploitation Center to search protesters鈥 cellphones. That team found the searches were illegal, and resisted pressure from senior Homeland Security leaders to assist FPS.

鈥淭hese requirements generally translate into the necessity for having a warrant and sending a written request to (Office of Intelligence and Analysis) for assistance. FPS provided neither,鈥 the report found, adding that senior leaders continued to pressure the exploitation center to ignore legal barriers.

Intelligence leaders from Homeland Security鈥檚 Field Operations Directorate were told to offer the Portland Police Bureau assistance in searching phones. According to the report, the bureau never accepted the offer, which became moot after the Portland City Council barring PPB from cooperating with federal law enforcement.

Intelligence analysts with the Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 Current and Emerging Threats Center were ordered to compile dossiers, known as 鈥淥perational Background Reports,鈥 or OBRs, on arrested protesters in an attempt to prove links between the protesters, or that there was a central leadership structure. Internally, Homeland Security employees called these reports 鈥渂aseball cards.鈥

The program illuminates how federal officials ignored the underlying causes of last summer鈥檚 unrest, and betrays a fundamental failure to understand the dynamics on the ground.

鈥淐onvinced that there was a coordinated effort to commit violence, [REDACTED NAME] intended purpose was to use the OBRs to confirm his suspicions that a link existed amongst the arrestees and identify a single individual or group that was masterminding the attacks,鈥 the report said.

Some Homeland Security staff spoke up over concerns that it was likely illegal to collect massive amounts of information on U.S. citizens with no connection to domestic terrorism. Those concerns were dismissed. Some staff refused to work on the reports.

鈥(Current and Emerging Threats Center) leadership sternly rebuffed the staff during a July 16, 2020 branch call admonishing staff that justification for completing the intrusive background searches was not necessary,鈥 the report said.

In a blatant disregard for DHS policies and civil liberties, leadership dismissed staff concerns.

鈥淩equests from leadership are justification enough,鈥 leadership told their staff according to the report. 鈥淒on鈥檛 need specifics...if he gives tasking it鈥檚 clear/legal to do.鈥

For more than a year, Wyden and other members of the Oregon Congressional Delegation have pressed DHS and the Justice Department for details about the Trump administration鈥檚 response to Portland鈥檚 protests.

Wyden said under Trump, DHS officials sought to 鈥減oliticize and inflame the conflict in Portland.鈥 Oregon鈥檚 senior senator called for an overhaul of the agency鈥檚 intelligence office.

鈥淚ndependent investigators confirmed that DHS intelligence officials lacked basic knowledge of their authority, what constituted real threats, and when it was appropriate to investigate Americans who were suspected of no crime at all,鈥 Wyden said in a statement Friday. 鈥淚t documents how untrained analysts investigated journalists. And there is more information that I believe the public deserves to know, but has been redacted. I鈥檒l continue working to make those items public.鈥
Copyright 2021

Jonathan Levinson is a multimedia reporter and producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting. He鈥檚 the Audion Fellow covering Guns & America.
Conrad Wilson is a reporter and producer covering criminal justice and legal affairs for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. His reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.