October 06, 2025
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Federal agents clash with Portland protesters — tear gas used minutes after judge blocks National Guard deployment

A federal judge barred deployment of the Oregon National Guard to Portland, and within minutes video showed federal agents in tactical gear — some marked DHS and U.S. Border Patrol — detaining protesters and deploying tear gas, with arrests reported. The Pentagon said no Oregon National Guard members were on mission in the Portland area, and White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson defended the administration's authority to protect federal assets and said it expects the Supreme Court to overturn the restraining order.

Legal Politics Military/National Security Public Safety

📌 Key Facts

  • Video footage shows federal agents in tactical gear detaining protesters and deploying tear gas late Sunday in Portland.
  • The federal agents were marked as DHS and U.S. Border Patrol.
  • The detentions and tear gas deployment occurred minutes after U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut issued a restraining order blocking deployment of the Oregon National Guard.
  • The Pentagon told Fox News Digital that while Oregon National Guard members remain under Title 10 (T10) status, 'there are no Oregon National Guard members on mission in or around the Portland area.'
  • White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson defended the president's authority to protect federal assets and said the administration expects the Supreme Court to overturn the restraining order.

📰 Sources (2)

Federal agents in Portland deploy tear gas, make arrests minutes after judge blocks National Guard
Fox News October 06, 2025
New information:
  • Video footage shows federal agents in tactical gear (marked DHS and U.S. Border Patrol) detaining protesters and deploying tear gas late Sunday, described as occurring minutes after Judge Karin Immergut's restraining order.
  • Pentagon told Fox News Digital that while Oregon National Guard members remain under T10 status, 'there are no Oregon National Guard members on mission in or around the Portland area.'
  • White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson issued a statement defending the president's authority to protect federal assets and saying the administration expects the Supreme Court to overturn the restraining order.