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Suspect in Portland protest killing dies in hail of gunfire

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A man who said he believed a civil war was coming to America and was suspected of killing a right-wing protester in Portland, Oregon, …
A man who said he believed a civil war was coming to America and was suspected of killing a right-wing protester in Portland, Oregon, died in a hail of police gunfire in neighboring Washington state, officials and witnesses said. The killing of Michael Forest Reinoehl shook a quiet suburb of Olympia, Washington Thursday evening, with bystanders ducking for cover behind automobiles from dozens of gunshots as four agents serving on a U. S. Marshals Service task force opened fire at Reinoehl. Reinoehl,48, was armed with a semi-automatic handgun but authorities have not determined if he fired any shots, said Lt. Ray Brady of the Thurston County Sheriff’s Department. A video shot during the immediate aftermath showed a man lying motionless on a street next to a row of mailboxes with law enforcement officers in tactical gear and automatic rifles milling around. After a couple of minutes, one man performed chest compressions on Reinoehl. “Yeah, I don’t think he’s going to make it,” Jashon Spencer narrated on the video that he posted on Facebook showing the scene that unfolded in front of a small apartment complex. Brady said he did not believe the officers involved in the shooting had body cameras or dashboard cameras on their vehicles. In a videotaped interview broadcast the evening of his death by Vice News, Reinoehl came close to admitting he shot Aaron “Jay” Danielson, a supporter of a right-wing group, on Aug.29 after a caravan of President Donald Trump backers drove their pickup trucks through downtown Portland. Reinoehl said he “had no choice” but to do what he did because he thought he and a friend were about to be stabbed. “I hate to say it, but I see a civil war right around the corner,” Reinoehl, with a partially covered tattoo of a raised fist on the right side of his neck, said in the interview. He told Vice News he was an anti-fascist but was not a member of antifa, an umbrella description for far-left-leaning militant groups that resist neo-Nazis and white supremacists at demonstrations and other events. It was not immediately clear where Reinoehl hid out in the five days that elapsed since shooting in Portland.

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