Credit: K. Marie
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K. Marie

The Portland Police Bureau (PPB) has a high threshold for what constitutes a threat when it comes to statements made by one of its own.

So when one sergeant policing a protest on a public sidewalk last November approached an activist who was legally filming cops and said, incorrectly, that the man โ€œcould be arrested,โ€ the PPB determined the sergeant didnโ€™t actually โ€œthreatenโ€ to arrest him.

โ€œ’Could be arrestedโ€™ is not sufficient enough to cross the line into an actual threat,โ€ Traffic Division Captain Mike Crebs told a civilian oversight board last week, explaining his decision to clear the sergeant of an allegation, filed by activist Ben Kerensa, that the cop had made an improper threat. โ€œI felt there had to be some kind of declaration that, ‘Youโ€™re going to be arrested if you donโ€™t stop filming.โ€™ That never occurred.โ€

The Citizen Review Committee (CRC)โ€”the civilian board which, among other duties, hears appeals from people who are unhappy with the results of their complaints against copsโ€”unanimously disagreed with Crebsโ€™ viewpoint.