God help you if you are a sworn officer working in the Portland Police Bureau and you get involved in some controversial use of force. You personally and the entire force will be condemned in protests and possibly full-fledged riots on the streets of downtown. To work Portland as a cop is to be more hated than the criminals. Case in point, the backlash over the April 7 officer-involved fatal shooting of John Elifritz. Here's the story, according to official and media reports:
Elifritz reportedly called 911 and told the dispatcher he or someone else had murdered his family. When officers arrived on the scene, they didn't find a dead family, but they did find Elifritz holding a knife to his own throat. He then fled.
Officers told the press they wanted to de-escalate so they backed off and called the department's behavioral health unit. Elifritz reportedly then went on a spree. He allegedly carjacked a Honda and spurred numerous 911 calls over what can only be described as bizarre behavior.
That night police caught up with Elifritz at a homeless shelter called Cityteam Ministries. Witnesses say he entered a room where an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting was about to begin and started slashing at himself with a knife.
Multiple Portland officers and a Multnomah County Sheriff's deputy followed Elifritz into that room. Video taken on a phone at the scene captured the shooting, spurring Portland's anti-police activists to accuse the officers of "murdering" Elifritz. They slam the officers for not using a K-9 to take the man down or using a TASER to subdue him or "de-escalating" the situation.