Portland university to disarm police after Black man’s death

Portland State University makes decision following calls for change after police killed Jason Washington in 2018.

People wearing protective face masks raise their fists during a protest against racial inequality and police violence in Portland, where protests against police brutality continue [Caitlin Ochs/Reuters]

Portland State University (PSU) says it will disarm its campus police force, more than two years after officers from the department shot and killed a Black man who was trying to break up a fight close to campus.

Oregon’s largest city is approaching 80 consecutive nightly protests following the alleged murder of George Floyd, the Black man who died after being pinned by the neck by a white Minneapolis police officer in May. 

Thursday’s announcement also came as Oregon state police began withdrawing from their Portland assignment to protect a federal courthouse that has become a flashpoint in the months-long, sometimes violent protests.  

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PSU President Stephen Percy said the decision to have officers patrol the campus unarmed is the first step in a broader policy to reimagine safety at the state-funded university in the heart of the city. The university has more than 26,000 students, although many commute to class.

“Over the past few weeks we have listened to many voices across our campus,” Percy wrote in an email to campus announcing the change. “The calls for change that we are hearing at PSU are ringing out across our nation. We must find a new way to protect the safety of our community, one that eliminates systemic racism and promotes the dignity of all who come to our urban campus.”

Activists had been calling for Portland State to disarm campus police long before Floyd’s death.

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The campus police officers were given guns for the first time in 2014 following a contentious decision that came despite concerns raised by students.

Then, in June 2018, two campus officers fatally shot 45-year-old Jason Washington, a Navy veteran and employee of the US Postal Service, near a bar just outside the boundaries of the university’s campus.

A report by the Portland Police Bureau found that college police officers fired 17 times and Washington was struck nine times. Oregon’s medical examiner ruled the death a homicide, a designation used for statistical purposes.

A grand jury ruled that the two officers should not face criminal charges.

Washington had been out drinking with friends when his group got into a confrontation with another group outside a bar called the Cheerful Tortoise just off campus in downtown Portland.

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A lengthy report released three months after the June 29, 2018, shooting, as well as footage pulled from the officers’ body cameras, show Washington had a gun in his right pocket when he tried to come to a friend’s assistance during a fight.

After killing him, officers found a legal permit to carry a concealed weapon in Washington’s wallet.

As campus police arrive at the scene, a man shouts several times, “He pulled a gun on us! He pulled a gun!” as he points to Washington, who appears to be trying to keep his friend from a fight.

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At that point, Washington’s visibly intoxicated friend breaks away and begins punching another man until he is kicked by a third person in the head and knocked out.

As Washington tries to pull the man away from his unconscious friend, one PSU officer grabs Washington’s arm from behind and tells him to back away from the fight. A black object that appears to be a gun is visible protruding from Washington’s right hip pocket at that moment in body camera video.

Washington stumbles backwards and falls to the ground as someone says, “He’s got a gun!”

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Portland protests against police abuses enter ninth week

Washington gets up, takes several steps away and turns to face the two officers as they shout at him to drop the gun.

The medical examiner’s report quotes one of the officers as yelling, “Do not pick up the gun!” just before the officers fired 17 shots “in very quick succession”. It is not clear from the video if Washington had already picked up the gun when he was shot.

Toxicology reports show Washington had a blood-alcohol content of more than three times the legal driving limit.

Portland State hired two independent firms, one to examine the school’s policy of arming campus police and another to conduct its own investigation into the shooting.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

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