The manager of the Gray’s Landing apartment complex across the street from Portland’s U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building is asking a judge to bar federal officers from firing tear gas, smoke grenades or other chemical munitions at protesters except when necessary to protect against an imminent threat.
The nonprofit Reach Community Development , which oversees the affordable housing complex, filed the lawsuit Friday in federal court in Portland along with several residents of the 200-plus-unit development against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Protective Service, Customs and Border Protection and the Secret Service.
The suit alleges federal officers have indiscriminately used chemical munitions to “put on a show” for conservative influencers as

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