Portland mayor tells all ICE agents to RESIGN after young girl among protesters doused with chemical agent during 'peaceful daytime protest'

The mayor of Portland told ICE agents to 'resign' and ordered the agency to leave the city after a young girl was tear gassed along with other 'peaceful protesters.' 

Demonstrators at an 'ICE out' protest outside an immigration facility in Oregon were struck with the chemical agent, along with pepper balls and rubber bullets. 

A video posted to Instagram showed a little girl crying as she attempted to recover after federal agents deployed tear gas. 

'It burns,' the young girl appears to say. 

The girl, who appears to be a preteen, could be seen wearing a pink shirt with butterflies as a protester douses her eyes with water.   

'Good job, spit it out,' someone can be heard saying as the girl appears distraught. 

Keith Wilson, the city's Democrat mayor, echoed the words of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey in asking the organization to get out. 

'To those who continue to work for ICE: Resign. To those who control this facility: Leave,' Wilson said in a statement.

He accused the agents of 'impacting a peaceful daytime protest where the vast majority of those present violated no laws, made no threat, and posed no danger to federal forces.' 

'Through your use of violence and the trampling of the Constitution, you have lost all legitimacy and replaced it with shame.'

Keith Wilson (pictured center), the mayor of Portland, Oregon told Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to 'resign' and leave the city after he claimed peaceful protesters were tear gassed

Keith Wilson (pictured center), the mayor of Portland, Oregon told Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to 'resign' and leave the city after he claimed peaceful protesters were tear gassed

Demonstrators at an 'ICE out' protest at an immigration facility said they faced the chemical agent, as well as pepper balls and rubber bullets

Demonstrators at an 'ICE out' protest at an immigration facility said they faced the chemical agent, as well as pepper balls and rubber bullets

Wilson told the agents to 'go home, look in a mirror, and ask yourselves why you have gassed children.'

He said that Portland will be enacting an ordinance that puts a fee on detention facilities that use tear gas.

Wilson also promised to document the actions of ICE agents and 'preserving evidence' to hold the federal government accountable.  

'Our nation will never accept a federal presence where agents wield deadly force against the very people they are sworn to serve.' 

Oregon's Democrat Governor Tina Kotek and Attorney General Dan Rayfield also spoke out against the actions of federal law enforcement.

'Trump's ICE has no place in Oregon. The use of tear gas against families, children, and peaceful demonstrators yesterday is a horrific abuse of authority that undermines public safety and violates constitutional rights. Federal agents must stand down and be held accountable,' Kotek said. 

The Daily Mail has reached out to a spokesperson for ICE for comment. 

The reliably leftist city has been a hub of protest activity in the wake of the shootings of Pretti and Good

The reliably leftist city has been a hub of protest activity in the wake of the shootings of Pretti and Good

Demonstrations began immediately after the shooting of 37-year-old Good

Demonstrations began immediately after the shooting of 37-year-old Good

The reliably leftist city has been a hub of protest activity in the wake of the shootings of Pretti and Good. 

Portland police have clarified that they deployed no munitions at protesters. They made no arrests.  

The district attorney's office has been referred a case of a man in a wheelchair being knocked over and taken to the hospital, KATU reported.  

Erin Hoover Barnett, a former OregonLive reporter who joined the protest, said she was about 100 yards from the building when 'what looked like two guys with rocket launchers' started dousing the crowd with gas. 

'To be among parents frantically trying to tend to little children in strollers, people using motorized carts trying to navigate as the rest of us staggered in retreat, unsure of how to get to safety, was terrifying,' Barnett wrote in an email to OregonLive.

The Portland Fire Bureau sent paramedics to treat people at the scene, police said. Police officers monitored the crowd but made no arrests Saturday.

The ICE facility in Portland is a field office that includes a processing center where federal officers detain and interview people to determine their legal status as US residents, according to a city website.

Saturday's Portland protest was one of many similar demonstrations nationwide against President Donald Trump administration's immigration crackdown in cities like Minneapolis, where in recent weeks federal agents killed two residents, Alex Pretti and Renee Good.

Federal agents in Eugene, Oregon, deployed tear gas on Friday when protesters broke windows and tried to get inside the Federal Building near downtown. 

City police declared a riot and ordered the crowd to disperse.

Trump posted Saturday on social media that it was up to local law enforcement agencies to police protests in their cities. 

However, Trump said he has instructed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to have federal agents be vigilant in guarding US government facilities.

'Please be aware that I have instructed ICE and/or Border Patrol to be very forceful in this protection of Federal Government Property. There will be no spitting in the faces of our Officers, there will be no punching or kicking the headlights of our cars, and there will be no rock or brick throwing at our vehicles, or at our Patriot Warriors,' Trump wrote. 

'If there is, those people will suffer an equal, or more, consequence.'