Real America’s Voice correspondent and Law and Border host Ben Bergquam went undercover in Portland, Oregon, to document escalating attacks on ICE and law enforcement. His raw footage reveals masked agitators, witchcraft shrines, and violent confrontations — exposing how far Portland has fallen after years of radical left influence.
When most national outlets minimize Portland’s unrest, Ben Bergquam refuses to look away. On Tuesday night, the Law and Border host and investigative correspondent for Real America’s Voice embedded himself in the heart of Portland’s uprising against ICE agents. What he captured is not the peaceful protest narrative the mainstream pushes — but a nightly battlefield where law enforcement faces off against Antifa militants determined to shut down federal immigration enforcement.
Bergquam’s video dispatches paint a vivid picture: crowds in face masks and headscarves push against police lines, flipping off officers, flashing strobe lights directly into their eyes, and shouting threats like, “You’re scum — we’re gonna get you one day!” Protesters arrived equipped — backpacks, canes, bags — prepared for confrontation. One wall bore the chilling graffiti, “Molotovs Melt ICE,” a slogan Bergquam highlighted as proof of the violent mindset at play.
“This has been going on for eight years now,” Bergquam said, walking the ground outside the ICE facility. “Hopefully the hammer gets laid on these terrorists, and they get taken out.” His words echo the frustration of federal officers forced to endure harassment night after night while still carrying out their mission.
The scenes Bergquam captured were more than just chaos. He exposed a darker element: a “witchcraft shrine” assembled outside, which he described as evidence of Portland’s spiritual decay. “This is what happens when you give your city over to the devil,” he warned, connecting the city’s lawlessness to a broader moral collapse.
In one clip, federal officers are seen dragging a woman from the street after she blocked law enforcement. Shouting “I’m a peaceful protester!” she resisted as agents arrested her. Bergquam’s commentary cut through the act: these were not peaceful protests but orchestrated obstruction. Later footage showed more arrests, as ICE agents pushed back against those impeding their duties.
Through it all, Bergquam underscored his support for the men and women inside the ICE facility: “You’ve got these heroes in this building still doing their jobs. God bless ICE. Deport every illegal into hell with the traitors.” His reporting stood as both eyewitness journalism and a rallying cry for those who see Portland’s unrest as part of a broader national battle over law, order, and America’s future.
For years, Portland has symbolized the Left’s experiment in governance — lenient prosecution, unchecked radical activism, and open hostility toward federal law enforcement. Bergquam’s undercover footage rips away the veneer and shows what it looks like on the ground: a city in decline, overrun by agitators, and hostile to those sworn to protect it.
Bottom line: While establishment media downplay or excuse Portland’s descent, Ben Bergquam is exposing the truth — raw, unfiltered, and dangerous to film. His work on Law and Border gives America a front-row seat to the nightly war waged against ICE and law enforcement, and a sobering reminder of what happens when radical ideology replaces law and order.