An Army veteran, a recent college graduate and a student who once won a poetry contest by condemning prejudice stirred up by the Sept. 11 attacks intervened as a man screamed anti-Muslim insults at two women in Portland, Ore., on Friday.
[...] Two of the men — Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche, 23, and Rick Best, 53 — died in the attack, which occurred on a commuter train. The third, Micah David-Cole Fletcher, 21, was treated on Saturday for injuries that the police said were serious but not life-threatening.
Jeremy Christian, 35, of North Portland, Ore., was charged with two counts of aggravated murder in the attack and could face additional charges when he is arraigned on Tuesday. Mr. Christian, who the authorities said had a history of making extremist statements on social media, was ranting at, and talking disparagingly about, the two women, one of whom was wearing a hijab.
Source: The New York Times
President Donald Trump has released his first official statement on the attack in Portland, Oregon, more than 48 hours after the two victims died.
"The violent attacks in Portland on Friday are unacceptable," Mr Trump tweeted. "The victims were standing up to hate and intolerance. Our prayers are w/ them."
Source: The Independent
Portland law enforcement leaders were tightlipped Saturday about the investigation into Friday's attacks that killed two men on a light rail train but a federal official did say it was too early to label the incident a hate crime.
[...] Loren Cannon, special agent in charge of the Portland FBI office, [...]
"It's too early to say whether last night's violence was an act of domestic terrorism or a federal hate crime," he said. "However, in the coming days, the FBI, PPB and the prosecutors will work together to share information, leverage resources and make determinations about future criminal charges."
[...] Leaders of the Muslim community said they were thankful for the men who gave their lives to save the girls from harm. They have raised $50,000 toward a goal of $60,000 to help support the victims and their families.
Source: The Oregonian
(Score: 2) by Bot on Tuesday May 30 2017, @07:43AM (5 children)
And, what about the following (found on random site [govtslaves.com]), is the fact true? The anti muslim march was surely planned before the attack, you don't organize those things in a mere week.
"Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler has urged the federal government to revoke a permit for a “free speech” rally and to refuse a permit for an anti-Muslim march planned for Portland next week."
Account abandoned.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday May 30 2017, @09:36AM (3 children)
(Score: 2) by Magic Oddball on Tuesday May 30 2017, @10:09AM (2 children)
I believe he's trying to refute the claim that openly anti-Muslim sentiment is just something being made up by the mass media.
(Score: 2) by Bot on Tuesday May 30 2017, @10:55AM
No, sorry, I was saying that marches against Islam* were already planned, but media failed to take into account the combination of this climate and a clearly deranged individual in their analysis. Media is, again, mere propaganda.
*) which are perfectly justified, because Islam is not constitutional whenever it gets outside the personal belief sphere, in the social sphere, and this is happening and media play dumb, and left plays dumb, and you should be concerned about that.
Account abandoned.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 30 2017, @01:47PM
unlikely since he's anti-muslim himself and considers it "natural."
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Tuesday May 30 2017, @09:53AM
Can't have freedom of speech (or in this specific case, freedom of assembly) if you suppress people even if you think they're batshit insane.
The ACLU went to bat for the American Nazi Party [wikipedia.org] over this very issue, and won the case because it didn't meet then standard of "clear and present danger", or the current standard of "imminent lawless action" required for prior restraint of the government.
Still always moving