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No evidence for rumor that Antifa cut down utility poles to start fires on the West Coast
If Your Time is short
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The post may stem from comments made by a sheriff’s captain during a Clackamas County, Ore., commission meeting. He said the office had received reports of "suspected antifa" activists and people trying to down telephone poles and start more fires.
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But the sheriff’s captain said those reports are unconfirmed. And multiple police departments, fire officials and the FBI’s Portland field office have debunked rumors that antifa has anything to do with wildfires on the West Coast.
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While the cause of many fires is under investigation, all evidence points to a mix of weather, downed power lines and fires set by people trying to enjoy the outdoors.
Public safety officials battling dozens of deadly wildfires on the West Coast have also found themselves battling online misinformation.
Some rumors claimed that antifa, a broad coalition of left-wing activists, was behind the fires, which have killed at least 33 people. Others said law enforcement had arrested several arsonists associated with the movement and that Black Lives Matter activists shot at firefighters.
Police departments, fire officials and journalists have all debunked those claims. But that hasn’t stopped the flow of misinformation about the wildfires, which span from California to Washington.
"ANTIFA is now carrying chain saws, and cutting down utility poles, and starting more fires," reads a Sept. 13 text post, which has been shared more than 3,300 times. "Is there any doubt that we have a war on our hands now?"
The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) We reached out to the original poster for their evidence, but we haven’t heard back.
(Screenshot from Facebook)
Downed power lines are thought to have played a role in multiple wildfires on the West Coast. But strong winds, not antifa, are to blame.
The claim in the Facebook post may stem from some comments at a Sept. 10 meeting of the Clackamas County commission, which were later unscrupulously reported by conspiratorial websites like the Hal Turner Radio Show.
During the Zoom meeting, the commission, which governs an area southeast of Portland, Ore., spoke with Capt. Jeff Smith of the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office. Smith told commissioners that the office had received reports about "extremist groups" that were "suspected antifa."
"This is more specific to the Estacada (Ore.) area — reports and sightings of people armed with chainsaws and the goal was to fall telephone poles in hopes of starting further fires," he said.
Smith also said the sheriff’s office had received reports of people staging full tanks of gas around the county to start more fires.
"But this is some media thing — it hasn’t been confirmed," said Jim Bernard, chair of the commission.
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"No, that part has not," Smith responded. "But the antifa part — there have been reliable sightings and reports. Not confirmed, but I mean, it's pretty specific: being armed with chainsaws falling telephone poles in the hopes of starting further fires."
Later in the meeting, when pressed on the source of his information about antifa sightings in Clackamas County, Smith said he heard it from a "sergeant on the street."
"I don't know who his informants are at this time," he said.
We reached out to the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office for more information, but we haven’t heard back.
We can’t verify whether a sheriff’s sergeant in Clackamas County did or didn’t receive reports about people trying to down power lines and start more fires.
The Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office has issued statements debunking rumors that it arrested arsonists suspected of setting fires nearby. It also put a patrol deputy on administrative leave after a video surfaced showing him making obscene comments about antifa activists starting fires in the area.
"As soon as I was made aware of this incident, I moved swiftly to place this deputy on leave while we investigate," said Clackamas County Sheriff Craig Roberts in a statement.
Multiple police departments and fire officials across the state say there’s no evidence that political extremist groups are to blame for dozens of fires burning on the West Coast. The FBI’s Portland field office has also debunked the rumors.
"FBI Portland and local law enforcement agencies have been receiving reports that extremists are responsible for setting wildfires in Oregon," said Special Agent in Charge Loren Cannon in a Sept. 11 statement on Twitter. "With our state and local partners, the FBI has investigated several such reports and found them to be untrue."
Investigators say some fires were set deliberately, such as one near Eugene, Ore., that burned hundreds of acres, another in Phoenix, Ore., and a small fire in Puyallup, Wash. But extremist groups are not thought to be connected to them, and arson appears to be the exception among causes for the wildfires, not the rule.
So what is causing the wildfires? All evidence points to a mix of weather, downed power lines and fires set by people trying to enjoy the outdoors during the coronavirus pandemic.
"Many of the fires currently burning in Oregon are still under investigation, so I don’t have confirmation of cause," said Joy Krawczyk, a public affairs manager for the Oregon Department of Forestry. "That being said, I haven’t seen or heard anything that indicates that the statewide wildfires we’re battling are the result of a coordinated, politically-driven arson campaign."
The Facebook post is inaccurate. We rate it False.
Our Sources
Al Jazeera, "Death toll rises as wildfires ravage US West Coast," Sept. 13, 2020
Clackamas County commission meeting, Sept. 10, 2020
Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office, "STATEMENT re: inappropriate comments made by Patrol deputy," Sept. 12, 2020
Email from Joy Krawczyk, public affairs manager for the Oregon Department of Forestry, Sept. 10, 2020
Facebook post, Sept. 13, 2020
Facebook post from the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office, Sept. 11, 2020
Facebook post from the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, Sept. 10, 2020
Facebook post from the Molalla Police Department, Sept. 9, 2020
Facebook post from Medford Police, Sept. 9, 2020
Fox 12, "Sheriff's office: Downed power line believed to be cause of several wildfires in Tillamook County," Sept. 8, 2020
The Mercury News, "California fires: Five reasons why this year is so bad," Sept. 8, 2020
National Interagency Coordination Center Incident Management Situation Report, Sept. 14, 2020
NBC News, "As wildfires rage, false antifa rumors spur pleas from police," Sept. 11, 2020
NPR, "Oregon Officials Warn False Antifa Rumors Waste Precious Resources For Fires," Sept. 13, 2020
The Oregonian, "Man arrested on arson allegation in wildfire west of Eugene, deputies say," Sept. 9, 2020
The Oregonian, "Rumors about ‘antifa’ wildfires in Oregon are false, law enforcement says," Sept. 11, 2020
Oregon Public Broadcasting, "Clackamas County deputy placed on leave after sharing antifa wildfire rumors in online video," Sept. 12, 2020
Oregon Public Broadcasting, "Fire officials say downed power lines played role in Santiam Fire," Sept. 10, 2020
Oregon Public Broadcasting, "Oregon’s human-caused wildfires are increasing and COVID-19 is getting the blame," Aug. 3, 2020
Oregon Public Broadcasting, "Southern Oregon police make arson arrest for second blaze set during Almeda Fire," Sept. 11, 2020
PolitiFact, "Antifa activists did not start the West Coast wildfires," Sept. 10, 2020
PolitiFact, "Ask PolitiFact: What is antifa, and why is it all over my timeline?" July 2, 2020
PolitiFact, "Fact-checking misinformation about firefighters, antifa in Portland," Sept. 13, 2020
PolitiFact, "Oregon law enforcement does not have six ‘antifa arsonists’ in custody," Sept. 11, 2020
Tacoma News Tribune, "Man charged with starting SR 167 fire not out of jail long before arrest in break-in," Sept. 11, 2020
Tweeted statement from FBI Portland, Sept. 11, 2020
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No evidence for rumor that Antifa cut down utility poles to start fires on the West Coast
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