logo
North Idaho woman forcibly removed from Kootenai County Republican town hall

North Idaho woman forcibly removed from Kootenai County Republican town hall

Yahoo25-02-2025

Three employees of private security firm LEAR Asset Management dragged Post Falls resident Teresa Borrenpohl out of a town hall meeting in Coeur d'Alene on Feb. 22, 2025, for heckling Idaho legislators. (Courtesy of the Coeur d'Alene Press)
COEUR d'ALENE — A legislative town hall organized by the Kootenai County Republican Central Committee devolved into chaos Saturday when unidentified, plainclothes security personnel dragged a Post Falls woman from the Coeur d'Alene High School auditorium for heckling legislators.
Though the company that provided security for the event has been identified, town hall organizers and Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris have claimed no knowledge of the security personnel or who hired them.
Coeur d'Alene Police Chief Lee White confirmed Sunday that the men who dragged Teresa Borrenpohl from the meeting worked for the private security firm LEAR Asset Management.
Reached by phone on Saturday and Sunday, the firm's owner, Hayden resident Paul Trouette, declined to comment.
As the town hall got underway and legislators made their remarks, Borrenpohl said the audience cheered and jeered at turns.
'Nobody was telling people cheering to stop cheering, but any time there was a negative reaction, we were scolded,' she said. 'I felt comfortable expressing displeasure because people were very openly expressing their appreciation for the legislators there.'
Borrenpohl said the turning point came when Rep. Ron Mendive, R-Coeur d'Alene, spoke about how he helps to take care of Idaho's public lands as co-chair of the Resources and Conservation Committee.
'I screamed — out of turn, admittedly — 'Phil Hart stole timber from public land,'' Borrenpohl said. 'That's when they seized on me.'
In 2010, The Coeur d'Alene Press reported that Sen. Phil Hart, R-Kellogg, issued a $2,450 check to the state for the 1996 market value of logs he took from state school endowment land to build his home.
Borrenpohl said she didn't recognize Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris at first when he approached her in the semidarkness of the auditorium because he was dressed in jeans and a baseball cap.
'I was really dumbfounded because he said, 'Do you want me to pepper spray you?'' she recalled. 'That was the first thing he said to me that I remember.'
Footage from the event showed Norris take Borrenpohl's arm with both hands and make multiple attempts to pull her from her seat.
Borrenpohl said that after she declined to leave, Norris turned to the unidentified men and said, 'Guys, get her.'
On video, Borrenpohl can be seen repeatedly asking the men to identify themselves. They did not. She asked Norris if the men were his deputies, and he gave no answer.
Kootenai County GOP officials said Saturday that they didn't know which company provided security for their event and told the Press to seek that information from the sheriff.
'Bob (Norris) was right there,' KCRCC chair Brent Regan said. 'Nothing was done without him being aware.'
Norris denied knowledge of the event's security arrangements and said he didn't know the security personnel.
Norris said his handling of Borrenpohl was in line with protocols that were set before the town hall began, though he did not explain what the protocols were or who had set them.
'(Borrenpohl) was asked to leave,' he said Sunday. 'She was asked to leave.'
With recordings of Norris and the security guards pulling on Borrenpohl circulating widely on social media, Norris said he's received death threats and he believes the incident is not being covered fairly.
'(The security guards') reaction was to (Borrenpohl's) action,' Norris said. 'The reason why that occurred was because people came to disrupt.'
White said it's not appropriate for law enforcement to forcefully remove a person from a town hall for speaking out of turn or shouting.
'I don't care what your message is, especially in an open town hall like this,' White said. 'We have to respect everybody's First Amendment rights, regardless of what side of the aisle you happen to sit on. I know there's some people up here who probably disagree with me and would like us to take action and maybe try to silence a voice that's in opposition to theirs at a town hall, but there's very little we can do with regard to First Amendment protections. We have to make sure people have the protections afforded them under the Constitution.'
Mary Rosdahl attended the town hall and described watching the sheriff attempt to pull Borrenpohl from her seat, then beckon to the security personnel. Rosdahl, who is a nurse, said she stood nearby during the incident because she feared for Borrenpohl's safety.
'They came and took her by the arms and pulled her and then took her by her feet and pulled her into the aisle,' she said. 'They laid her face-down on the floor. Two of them were on top of her, holding her down, and then eventually they boosted her up on her feet and dragged her out the door. I was worried about their handling.'
Borrenpohl said she remembers 'hands coming from everywhere' trying to haul her from her seat and pushing her to the ground. To her left, she said, she heard friends defending her while people across the aisle jeered at her and applauded the men who were attempting to remove her from the auditorium.
As the men dragged her down the aisle, Borrenpohl lost her shoe, and at one point, her shirt nearly came off.
'It was really violent and really traumatic,' she said. 'They had grabbed my wrists. They contorted my body. They lifted me up and dropped me down. My only thought was to maintain my airway. They were forcing me down on the ground. I just wanted to make sure I could still breathe.'
Borrenpohl said she bit one of the men who was dragging her from the auditorium.
'I didn't know if I was being detained by what I now knew to be the sheriff's office or if these were private hired guns,' she said. 'I was so confused, and I didn't know if I was being arrested by the sheriff's office or if I was being kidnapped.'
White confirmed that Borrenpohl was cited and released for misdemeanor battery because of the bite, though he noted that the officers who responded to CHS didn't have access to the numerous video recordings that showed what happened before they arrived.
'Now that we are in receipt of several videos that show the majority of the event that we didn't have at the time, (the battery citation) will be under review by our prosecutor's office,' he said.
On Monday, The Coeur d'Alene Press reported that city prosecutors will dismiss the misdemeanor battery citation. The city of Coeur d'Alene also revoked the security company's business license, The Press reported.
'The city prosecuting attorney's office has moved to dismiss the citation against Borrenpohl in the interest of justice,' the Coeur d'Alene Police Department said in a press release Monday.
White said his officers declined the sheriff's request that Borrenpohl be arrested for trespassing.
'We respectfully informed the sheriff that, since this was an open to the public event, we are not going to arrest anyone for trespassing,' White said. 'That would be inappropriate.'
Meanwhile, the city revoked the business license for LEAR Asset Management 'for violating Coeur d'Alene city ordinances regarding security agencies and agents,' The Press reported on Monday.
Coeur d'Alene city code requires security agents to wear uniforms 'clearly marked' with the word 'security' in letters no less than 1 inch tall on the front and no less than four inches tall on the back. The security personnel at Saturday's town hall were in plainclothes, with no visible sign they were security.
When the Coeur d'Alene City Council approved the uniform requirement last summer, Trouette testified against the change.
'Paul Trouette contacted me and told me they wouldn't be doing any security of that type in our city, and yet, here they are,' White said. 'As far as I know, (LEAR Asset Management has) a license, but not a license to perform activity such as this.'
Norris said he was invited to lead the Pledge of Allegiance at the town hall and remained onsite after doing so because of a recent threat against Rep. Jordan Redman, R-Coeur d'Alene.
On Saturday morning, Coeur d'Alene police were investigating a threat against Redman's office that originated on social media. White said his agency only learned about the town hall because Redman mentioned it when they spoke with him about the threat.
Coeur d'Alene police officers were in the parking lot at CHS during the town hall in case the Shoshone County resident who allegedly made the threat appeared, White said. When there was a disturbance in the auditorium, no one alerted the officers until after Borrenpohl had been removed.
Norris said this was because it wasn't the agency's place to act.
'They don't have jurisdiction,' he said of the Coeur d'Alene Police Department. 'They would not have come into a private event held at the high school and the person who secures the location gets to set the protocols of what occurs.'
White pushed back on Norris' comment. Coeur d'Alene High School is squarely within his agency's jurisdiction, he said, and his officers would've entered the building had they been called sooner.
'We would've stood by to make sure no one was in danger, while at the same time protecting people's First Amendment rights,' he said.
Rosdahl, who regularly attends town halls and other political events, called Saturday's scene 'terrible' and said she's concerned the chaos will have a chilling effect on political speech in Kootenai County.
'It was a time for our legislators and the moderator to put forward their ideas about government, but there was no public feedback,' she said. 'They didn't want to hear what the community had to say. That was very clear.'
Borrenpohl ran as a Democrat for a legislative seat in 2020, 2022 and 2024. During the past several years, amid North Idaho College's accreditation crisis, she vocally criticized three former NIC trustees who were backed by the Kootenai County GOP.
'I didn't know if I was in trouble for saying Phil Hart stole from public lands or if it was because I'm a known Democrat in the area,' she said.
The town hall was meant to be a forum where constituents could engage with their legislators, Borrenpohl said.
She said she was denied that opportunity. Borrenpohl also alleges she was assaulted.
'I think that my civil rights were stripped from me in that moment in a really embarrassing way,' she said. 'Admittedly, I spoke out of turn. But do we live in a country where you speak out of turn and the result is three men assaulting a woman?'
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Speaker Johnson Downplays Musk's Influence, Suggests Republicans Will Pass Budget Bill
Speaker Johnson Downplays Musk's Influence, Suggests Republicans Will Pass Budget Bill

Epoch Times

time2 hours ago

  • Epoch Times

Speaker Johnson Downplays Musk's Influence, Suggests Republicans Will Pass Budget Bill

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on June 8 downplayed tech billionaire Elon Musk's critical comments and said that House Republicans will pass the One Big Beautiful Bill Act backed by President Donald Trump. Last week, Musk and Trump got into a heated back and forth after the Tesla CEO repeatedly bashed the spending bill on social media. Trump suggested that it was because of its cuts to electric vehicle mandates, and at one point floated cutting federal money to Musk's companies. Meanwhile, Musk took credit for Trump and the GOP winning the 2024 election and threatened to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft.

Republicans gather in Mackinaw City with message of unity ahead of 2026 battleground
Republicans gather in Mackinaw City with message of unity ahead of 2026 battleground

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Republicans gather in Mackinaw City with message of unity ahead of 2026 battleground

U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Watersmeet) speaks to Michigan Republican Party donors, elected officials and activists at the Straits Area Lincoln Day Dinner event in Mackinaw City on June 7, 2025 | Photo by Ben Solis MACKINAW CITY – Hopped up on a series of fresh wins and with their man in the White House, Michigan Republicans on Saturday said they need to hold it together over the next year if they want to achieve a full sweep of key offices in 2026. With momentum at their backs, it appeared that nothing less would satisfy the nearly 150 donors and elected officials who met to dine at Audie's Restaurant in Mackinaw City for the Straits Area Lincoln Day Dinner. The guest list included two members of the state's congressional delegation – one who may very well seek the open U.S. Senate seat – the Michigan Legislature and many more local officials. Two GOP candidates for governor – former Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox and current Senate Minority Leader Aric Nesbitt (R-Porter Township) – were also in attendance, who stumped before the crowd with speeches heavy on potential policy for the state. Michiganders in 2026 will not only select a replacement for retiring Democratic U.S. Sen. Gary Peters, but also a new governor, secretary of state and attorney general. Control of the Michigan Senate is also up for grabs, with Republicans hoping the wind in their sails from President Donald Trump's 2024 victory will help them win back control of the entire state Legislature after Democrats swept races in 2022. Sen. John Damoose (R-Harbor Springs) said that fight is starting early and that he hoped his colleagues understood the measure of the moment. Looking out on the packed banquet hall in the back of Audie's Restaurant, Damoose said the energy was palpable. 'It made me think back to the dark days after 2020, where we just felt kicked in the teeth and we broke up and went into different corners, and we fought amongst ourselves,' Damoose said. 'We were downtrodden and we didn't really have a clear path forward. We were worried that the election wasn't fair.' Damoose said he then thought of his son, who was in high school at the time, and that if he had come home with a poor test score, he likely would have all kinds of excuses about why he failed that test. 'Even if that were true, I would tell him that I didn't care about that. I want to know what you are going to do to do better next time,' Damoose said. That parable was also indicative of what the kind of soul searching Republicans need to do heading into 2026. 'It hurt us to sit and fight. We saw the results of that in 2022, but we did a little better last year,' Damoose said. 'We want the same good things, but the bottom line is, if anybody's out there wondering whether we're divided, look at this [room] and look at the list of people who are here today, ready to win in 2026.' A family sometimes gets into arguments, but the bottom line is that they love each other, Damoose added. He also spoke highly of Sen. Jim Runestad (R-White Lake), chair of the Michigan Republican Party, whom Damoose said was committed to bringing them back together. Sen. Ed McBroom (R-Vulcan) said there will be challenging races for the MIGOP in the Upper Peninsula and it would take a lot of support to get across the finish line. The big prize, however, would be the top three executive offices, all currently held by Democrats. In a jab at Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Attorney General Dana Nessel and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson – the latter of whom is running for governor in 2026 – McBroom said it wouldn't take much to have candidates better than what Michigan has. U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Watersmeet), who attended the event along with headlining speaker U.S. Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-Zeeland), said Trump not being on the ballot means Republicans must focus on voter turnout. If they don't get the turnout equation right in 2026, Republicans could lose the U.S. House, and that would render the last years of Trump's presidency dead in the water. 'The Democrats will veto the Trump agenda, with all the impeachment and stuff that they will choose to do,' Bergman said before adding that he doesn't believe Democrats have a handle on their own platform. 'Who's your party leader? What's your party platform? What is your plan? When you don't have [all three], you're getting what you're getting.' Several protesters greeted Bergman with signs and chants as they walked along the sidewalk outside Audie's Restaurant. Undeterred, Bergman said that aside from holding the U.S. House, getting back control of Lansing in the Legislature and the executive branch should be donors and activists' main priority. The state House fell back into Republican control last year mostly due to Trump's resurgence and a plan executed by Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall (R-Richland Township). That has already had consequences for the Democrats who controlled both chambers last session as Republicans seek to roll back their legislative agenda and trim the budget with an ethos similar to that of DOGE, the Trump administration effort that has sought to slash, if not eliminate outright, the budgets of federal agencies and departments. Although the Democratic-controlled Michigan Senate has put forward its 2025 fiscal year budget, the state House has been slowwalking theirs, with members of the House Appropriations Committee noting how they're going through it with a fine-toothed comb every chance they can in statements or press conferences. Case in point: When speaking to the crowd on Saturday, Rep. John Roth (R-Interlochen) talked about his work thus far on appropriations, and said he had 10 items that he 'killed immediately' when he took over his budget. 'One was the water affordability bill that nobody could tell me why there was money in there for anything,' Roth said. 'So, $10 million, gone. We're having a lot of fun with that.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Speaker Johnson teases follow-ups to the ‘one big, beautiful bill'
Speaker Johnson teases follow-ups to the ‘one big, beautiful bill'

The Hill

time4 hours ago

  • The Hill

Speaker Johnson teases follow-ups to the ‘one big, beautiful bill'

The 'one big, beautiful bill' may not be so singular, after all. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) is teasing follow-up legislation to the megabill of President Trump's tax cut and spending priorities that Republicans can push though using the same special budget reconciliation process that requires only GOP votes. That tool can be used once per fiscal year, with the current fiscal year ending on Sept. 30. So after Republicans are done with the 'big, beautiful bill,' the GOP trifecta has, in theory, two more shots to muscle through party-line legislation before the next Congress comes into power after the midterms. Johnson floated plans for a second reconciliation bill while rebutting concerns from deficit hawks on the budget impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — which includes an extension of tax cuts and boosts to border and defense funding, with costs offset in part by new requirements on low-income assistance programs like Medicaid and food aid. 'Everyone here wants to reduce spending,' Johnson said Friday morning on CNBC. 'But you have to do that in a sequence of events. We have a plan, OK? This is the first of a multistep process.' 'We're going to have another reconciliation bill that follows this one, possibly a third one before this Congress is up, because you can have a reconciliation bill for each budget year, each fiscal year. So that's ahead of us,' Johnson continued, also pointing to separate plans to claw back money based on recommendations from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). 'We're also doing rescissions packages. We got the first one delivered this week from the White House, and that will codify many of the DOGE cuts.' The promise of another reconciliation bill is somewhat surprising given the crux of the debate that dominated the early weeks of the year: Should Republicans divide up their agenda into two bills, passing the first quickly to give Trump an early win on boosting funding for border enforcement and deportations? Or would putting all of Trump's priorities into one bill — which would contain both bitter pills and sweeteners for different factions of the razor-thin majority — be a better political strategy? Trump eventually said he preferred 'one big, beautiful bill,' a moniker that became the legislation's official title in the House last month. It's not clear what would be in a second piece of legislation. Multiple House Republicans who spoke with The Hill were unaware of plans for more reconciliation bills and were not sure what could be included in them. 'I think we need to see what's left on the table after the first one,' Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas) said. And to muster through multiple reconciliation bills is a delicate prospect. If members know more reconciliation bills are coming, that complicates the argument that everything in the current package — even policies some factions dislike that others love — need to stay in one megabill. The Speaker declined to elaborate on what might be in such a package when asked in a press conference last week. 'I'm not going to tell you that,' Johnson said. 'Let's get the first one done.' 'Look, I say this is the beginning of a process, and what you're going to see is a continuing of us identifying waste, fraud, abuse in government, which is our pledge of common sense, restoring common sense and fiscal sanity. So we have lots of ideas of things that might be in that package.' Republicans had started planning for the current legislative behemoth months before the 2024 election so they would be prepared to quickly execute on their policy wish list if they won the majority. 'This isn't something we just drew up overnight. So, we'll go through that same laborious process,' Johnson said. But some members have ideas of what else they'd like to see. Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) said that he'd hope a second bill would do more to tackle rolling back green energy tax credits and make further spending cuts. Ultimately, though, it will be Trump's call, Norman said: 'I know when the president gets involved, it adds a lot of value.' And Rep. August Pfluger (R-Texas) speculated that passing the 'big, beautiful bill' would inspire members to keep going with another bill. 'People like the feeling of winning,' Pfluger said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store