Far-right demonstrators clashed with anti-racism protesters in several U.S. cities on Saturday, per USA Today.
Driving the news: In Portland, counter-protesters at a pro-police rally were "aiming pepper spray and firing some kind of pellet gun at people" as Black Lives Matter demonstrators marked an 80th straight day of protests, the Oregonian reports.
Two shots fired by Proud Boys in downtown Portland near 4th and Taylor.
— Do It For The Futures 🏁🐍 (@MacSmiff) August 15, 2020
Nobody hit. Counterprotesters quickly recovered a bullet casing to provide to the ACLU. pic.twitter.com/S7OKux7ntH
- At least one person was wounded after being "hit with a paintball fired from a paintball gun," KGWB notes.
- There were reports of far-right groups "shooting blanks" and Portland police said one person allegedly fired a gun, but no one was injured, the news outlet added.
At the Oregon Capitol in Salem, "several people with the Black Lives Matter movement were shoved down steps and into a crowd of BLM protesters," according to USA Today.
In Michigan, Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety "made multiple arrests" after several people were wounded during fights between the far-right Proud Boys group and anti-racism protesters in the city, WWMT reports.
- Michigan Rep. Fred Upton tweeted, "The Proud Boys are a hateful group with a hateful mission. They need to crawl back under whatever rock they came from. They have no place in Kalamazoo and no place in America."
- MLive said one of its journalists was arrested while covering the clashes in Kalamazoo.
In Georgia, white nationalists scuffled with anti-racism protesters after being denied entry to Stone Mountain Park, which houses the largest Confederate monument in the U.S., per the New York Times.
- The City of Stone Mountain said Friday it would close the park in anticipation of the pro-Confederacy rally at the site — which is considered to be "a launching pad" for the 1915 "rebirth of the Ku Klux Klan," according the Smithsonian.
- The city said while "minor altercations" did occur outside the park, the gatherings ended "with no injury, no arrests and no property damage."
Go deeper: Dozens of Confederate symbols removed in wake of George Floyd's death