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[
{
"title": "AP photojournalist assaulted by bystander during event in Philadelphia",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/ap-photojournalist-assaulted-bystander-during-event-philadelphia/",
"first_published_at": "2020-06-24T19:20:49.589346Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-03-22T15:52:14.730037Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-03-22T15:52:14.493720Z",
"date": "2020-06-04",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Philadelphia",
"longitude": -75.16362,
"latitude": 39.95238,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"sc5u1\">Associated Press photojournalist Matt Rourke was assaulted while covering an event in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 4, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"7nqrb\">Rourke was part of a news crew photographing and interviewing Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw and Mayor Jim Kenney in North Philadelphia as the two toured the area following days of protests spurred by the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis, Minnesota.</p><p data-block-key=\"q8i8s\">The AP <a href=\"https://apnews.com/50db97d34240813054ef3c398500af4e\">reported</a> that as Outlaw and Kenney crossed the street, a bystander approached Rourke and punched him in the face, causing him to lose consciousness and fall to the ground. The outlet wrote that it is unclear what prompted the attack.</p><p data-block-key=\"mnb69\">Officers tackled the man — later identified as Derrick King — and took him into custody. King has been charged with aggravated assault, simple assault, endangering another person and resisting arrest, the Tribune reported.</p><p data-block-key=\"7jng9\">The Philadelphia Police Department did not respond to requests for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"40s0w\">Rourke, who could not be reached for comment, was treated at a hospital for significant facial injuries and has since been released.</p><p data-block-key=\"xq39p\">King is facing charges of aggravated assault, simple assault, endangering another person and resisting arrest, the AP reported.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": "https://media.pressfreedomtracker.us/media/images/RTS3A1QP.2e16d0ba.fill-1330x880.jpg",
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"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"dj3ie\">National Guard and Police maintain barricades near City Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 1, following days of protests. Three days later, a bystander attacked an AP photojournalist as the mayor and police commissioner toured the area.</p>",
"arresting_authority": null,
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"case_number": null,
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"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
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"assailant": "private individual",
"was_journalist_targeted": "yes",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
"subpoena_type": null,
"name_of_business": null,
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"state": {
"name": "Pennsylvania",
"abbreviation": "PA"
},
"updates": [
"(2024-03-21 11:49:00+00:00) Man who punched AP photographer sentenced to prison"
],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Matt Rourke (The Associated Press)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "Russian freelance journalist arrested while covering protests in Brooklyn",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/russian-freelance-journalist-arrested-while-covering-protests-brooklyn/",
"first_published_at": "2020-12-02T18:21:00.501744Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:46:42.727222Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:46:42.626436Z",
"date": "2020-06-04",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "New York",
"longitude": -74.00597,
"latitude": 40.71427,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"js4l1\">Russian freelance journalist Yana Mulder was reporting on protests in the New York borough of Brooklyn on June 4, 2020, when she was arrested while trying to intervene in the violent arrest of her husband. Mulder said she told police that she was press and that her husband was assisting the TV production crew.</p><p data-block-key=\"j1m1w\">The protest came one day after New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio imposed an 8 p.m. curfew aimed at controlling escalating unrest in the city. Essential workers — who, in New York, <a href=\"https://www.governor.ny.gov/sites/governor.ny.gov/files/atoms/files/EO202.6.pdf\">include</a> members of the media — were <a href=\"https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/home/downloads/pdf/executive-orders/2020/eeo-119.pdf\">exempt</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"8jrpm\">In a phone interview with the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, Mulder said that she was reporting that night on a post-curfew protest in Brooklyn for the Russian television channel REN.TV. She said she followed the protest through the streets of Brooklyn until it abruptly stopped at the intersection of Wythe Avenue and Penn Street.</p><p data-block-key=\"rd0wx\">Mulder said the protesters halted when they were just 10 or 15 steps away from a line of New York Police Department officers. She said she, along with her cameraman, her photographer, and her husband, stood off to the right side of the protest with another group of journalists. Mulder said her husband was helping the broadcast crew by holding up a light for the camera.</p><p data-block-key=\"a10mw\">According to Mulder, police officers took out packs of zip-ties, which she reported on camera, noting that they were going to start arresting people. At this point, some at the rear of the group began to disperse, leaving about three layers of protesters facing the police, Mulder told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"u42y0\">Daniel Verde, a journalist who was also at the intersection when the police charged forward to arrest protesters, posted a video on Twitter at 9:21 p.m. <a href=\"https://twitter.com/verde_nyc/status/1268714500049551366\">showing</a> police pursuing and grabbing protesters as they tried to flee.</p><p data-block-key=\"v45uk\">In a video taken of the advance on her phone, Mulder can be heard warning her camera operator to be careful while moving toward an armored police car.</p><p data-block-key=\"kmdtp\">One policeman shouts, “Let’s go!” and Mulder directs her crew to capture the officers charging the protesters. As Mulder spins to look around her, she sees her husband, Nick Mulder, on the ground being hit with a baton by an officer while in the process of being arrested. Mulder can be heard yelling to the officer, “Please, please don’t!” The officer responds, “Stay out of here, go back!” At this point, Mulder turns her phone camera off.</p><p data-block-key=\"psfn6\">According to Mulder, her husband had come to pick her up from the protest and was helping the production crew by holding a light for the broadcast.</p><p data-block-key=\"333dt\">“I tried to explain to the police that I’m a reporter; I told him that my husband was part of the group,” she said. Despite identifying herself as press, “four other cops grabbed me, put handcuffs on me as well, and we were both escorted to the [bus].”</p><p data-block-key=\"10cwm\">Mulder’s phone video showed that, as she asked police to stop, the crowd surrounding the journalist and her husband yelled repeatedly that they were press. One person tweeted about the arrests:</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">I was arrested here — along with a young female journalist. She was speaking on camera when they grabbed her. They knocked down, beat, and arrested her husband, who was part of the production crew, holding a light. Their sound and camera guys got away.</p>— Sarah Rose Kearns (@Persuasion_JA) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Persuasion_JA/status/1268800412502691842?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 5, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"opnm7\">Mulder said that police zip-tied her husband’s hands and hers, and they were brought to the 90th precinct in a bus full of protesters.</p><p data-block-key=\"f7vzj\">At the station, Mulder said, she offered to show her press pass from the IWW Freelance Journalists Union, as well as an email from her employer about her assignment. “They didn’t look at anything,” she told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"w31oo\">In an <a href=\"https://www.instagram.com/p/CBI2vBdB4aJ/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet\">Instagram post</a> Mulder wrote that her bag was taken and the police officer in charge of searching bags asked her “Do you have anything in your bag that can hurt me?” When she replied in the negative, the officer returned her bag without searching it, she said. After five hours, the couple was released with a summons for a court date a month later, according to Mulder.</p><p data-block-key=\"l2fef\">According to the summons slip, which the Tracker reviewed, Mulder was charged with “violation of Mayor’s emergency order,” a <a href=\"https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/home/downloads/pdf/executive-orders/2020/eeo-118.pdf\">Class B misdemeanor</a> that carries a fine of up to $500 and a maximum of three months in prison in the New York Penal Code. Neither Mulder nor her husband appeared in court on the day listed on her summons, since the Kings & New York Criminal Court had been closed indefinitely <a href=\"https://www.nydailynews.com/coronavirus/ny-coronavirus-new-york-courts-criminal-trials-suspended-20200313-4axguufmhrgvlbljhlq4nbofsm-story.html\">since March</a>. Mulder told the Tracker that no one from NYPD followed up on the summonses issued to her and her husband, perhaps because their last name was spelled incorrectly as M-O-U-L-D-E-R.</p><p data-block-key=\"svw49\">Mulder said that the American Civil Liberties Union contacted her husband Nick shortly after the incident. According to the journalist, the ACLU is working with her husband to file a civil suit against the NYPD.</p><p data-block-key=\"8rdt1\">The NYPD did not respond to a request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"erdj8\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering Black Lives Matter protests across the country. Find these incidents <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"zudo6\"><i>Editor's Note:</i> <i>This article was updated to reflect the correct spelling of Nick Mulder’s name.</i></p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": null,
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "",
"arresting_authority": "New York City Police Department",
"arrest_status": "arrested and released",
"release_date": "2020-06-05",
"detention_date": null,
"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
"case_number": null,
"case_type": null,
"status_of_seized_equipment": null,
"is_search_warrant_obtained": false,
"actor": null,
"border_point": null,
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"stopped_previously": false,
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"assailant": null,
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"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
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"name_of_business": null,
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"legal_order_venue": null,
"status_of_prior_restraint": null,
"mistakenly_released_materials": false,
"links": [],
"equipment_seized": [],
"equipment_broken": [],
"state": {
"name": "New York",
"abbreviation": "NY"
},
"updates": [
"(2020-12-08 14:31:00+00:00) Charges against Russian freelance journalist filed under incorrect name"
],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Yana Mulder (REN.TV)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "NYPD officer hits, knocks down Reuters photographer covering Brooklyn protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/nypd-officer-hits-knocks-down-reuters-photographer-covering-brooklyn-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-11-03T17:06:19.901538Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:48:32.695570Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:48:32.607146Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "New York",
"longitude": -74.00597,
"latitude": 40.71427,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"21zm2\">Reuters photojournalist Brendan McDermid was struck and shoved to the ground by a New York City police officer while he was covering protests against police violence in the borough of Brooklyn on June 3, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"k2bob\">The protest was one of many held this year across the U.S. following the May 25 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.</p><p data-block-key=\"in34d\">McDermid was photographing the demonstration in downtown Brooklyn, where police had mustered near Cadman Plaza Park to try to block demonstrators from advancing. According to a letter Reuters General Counsel Gail Gove wrote to the New York City Police Department, provided to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, an officer first noticed McDermid around that time. Protesters and police clashed, and police began arresting demonstrators, sometimes using physical force, as the protest moved toward Borough Hall.</p><p data-block-key=\"ol888\">The officer who had observed McDermid continued to watch him, Gove wrote. After moving about four blocks, the officer approached McDermid, got very close to his face, and shouted at him to “get out of here!”</p><p data-block-key=\"xhmw5\">McDermid was clearly marked as a journalist, displaying his press pass and wearing a flak jacket with the word “PRESS” clearly visible, Gove wrote. An account of the encounter in a <a href=\"https://www.rcfp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-6-20-New-York-Press-Letter.pdf\">June 6 letter</a> by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press noted that McDermid complied with police orders as he was covering the protest.</p><p data-block-key=\"baxp9\">McDermid continued to photograph the scene after the officer left. A short time later, according to Gove, McDermid turned and saw the officer charging at him from about 10 feet away. The officer struck the photographer with his baton in his chest, and knocked him to the ground. While McDermid was on the ground, the officer hit him in the leg and on his helmet and laughed, Gove wrote.</p><p data-block-key=\"btpaq\">McDermid consulted with a doctor after the assault, according to Gove. He wasn’t injured, which Gove said was because of the protective gear he was wearing.</p><p data-block-key=\"zz96r\">The NYPD didn’t respond to requests for comment about the incident.</p><p data-block-key=\"nrz6n\">“Journalists must be allowed to cover the news in the public interest without fear of harassment or harm, wherever they are,” a spokesperson for Reuters said in an email to the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"1wm20\">RCFP referenced the assault on McDermid and several other incidents targeting journalists in its<a href=\"https://www.rcfp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-6-20-New-York-Press-Letter.pdf\"> June 6 letter</a> to New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea urging the city to discipline officers who arrested or assaulted journalists, along with taking other steps to protect journalists covering protests.</p><p data-block-key=\"4s5ne\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists being assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas, or having their equipment damaged while covering these protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\"> these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": "https://media.pressfreedomtracker.us/media/images/RTS3AJXD.2e16d0ba.fill-1330x880.jpg",
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"rvmi5\">Reuters said photographer Brendan McDermid was knocked down and hit with a baton by a New York Police Department officer while he was on assignment capturing this image and others during a protest in Brooklyn on June 3, 2020.</p>",
"arresting_authority": null,
"arrest_status": null,
"release_date": null,
"detention_date": null,
"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
"case_number": null,
"case_type": null,
"status_of_seized_equipment": null,
"is_search_warrant_obtained": false,
"actor": null,
"border_point": null,
"target_us_citizenship_status": null,
"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
"did_authorities_ask_about_work": null,
"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "yes",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
"subpoena_type": null,
"name_of_business": null,
"third_party_business": null,
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"status_of_prior_restraint": null,
"mistakenly_released_materials": false,
"links": [],
"equipment_seized": [],
"equipment_broken": [],
"state": {
"name": "New York",
"abbreviation": "NY"
},
"updates": [],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Brendan McDermid (Reuters)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "Tampa Bay Times journalist knocked to the ground, detained while covering Florida protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/tampa-bay-times-journalist-knocked-ground-detained-while-covering-florida-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-22T15:46:49.439206Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:48:07.524527Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:48:07.428540Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Tampa",
"longitude": -82.45843,
"latitude": 27.94752,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"8te3m\">Tampa Bay Times reporter Divya Kumar was detained in the early hours of June 3, 2020, while covering a protest in Tampa, Florida.</p><p data-block-key=\"w9nh7\">Protesters had gathered in Tampa and in cities across the U.S. to denounce police brutality following the death of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25.</p><p data-block-key=\"e4f7g\">The Times <a href=\"https://www.tampabay.com/news/tampa/2020/06/03/two-reporters-for-times-placed-in-zip-ties-while-covering-protests/\">reported</a> that Kumar was arrested downtown when Tampa Bay Police Department officers declared an unlawful assembly near Joe Chillura Courthouse Square.</p><p data-block-key=\"axicf\">The outlet reported that Kumar held up her media credentials to identify herself as a member of the press as a line of bicycle officers advanced. However, one of the bicycle officers knocked Kumar to the ground, handcuffed her and then placed her in plastic zip ties for 10 to 15 minutes.</p><p data-block-key=\"9h3as\">Luis Santana, a Times photojournalist, posted photos of her detention <a href=\"https://twitter.com/TBTphotog/status/1268052049964523531\">on Twitter</a>.</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/TB_Times?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@TB_Times</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/divyadivyadivya?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@divyadivyadivya</a> places in cuffs and detained by <a href=\"https://twitter.com/TampaPD?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@TampaPD</a> while covering the protests in downtown Tampa even after identifying herself as a Times reporter. She was eventually released. <a href=\"https://t.co/4E9095kmcM\">pic.twitter.com/4E9095kmcM</a></p>— Luis Santana (@TBTphotog) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/TBTphotog/status/1268052049964523531?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"rj8xy\">“I don’t know what I could have done differently,” Kumar told the Times. “I identified myself as a journalist and tried to get out of there safely.”</p><p data-block-key=\"nrutl\">In a <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/WFLANewsChannel8/videos/1099038763812889\">news conference</a> held later that day, Tampa Police Chief Brian Dugan defended the officers’ actions and emphasized that Kumar had been detained, not arrested.</p><p data-block-key=\"zifd0\">“I think what happened was in their effort to cover the actions they ended up too close to it and ended up getting detained,” Dugan said, adding that Kumar was released after she was identified as a member of the media.</p><p data-block-key=\"lbacr\">At the same press conference, Mayor Jane Castor suggested that many people attended the protest with fake media credentials, and declined to apologize for Kumar’s detention.</p><p data-block-key=\"p8ik5\">“We got bigger things out there than apologizing to a reporter that gets detained that didn’t leave when they were asked to leave three times,” Castor said.</p><p data-block-key=\"i4cm5\">The Times reported that later that day, Castor did call Kumar to apologize, as did Chief Assistant City Attorney Kirby Rainsberger.</p><p data-block-key=\"2jbt5\">Rainsberger said officers’ treatment of Kumar was “an overreaction,” and the city was reiterating the right of the press to the department during officer roll calls and via email.</p><p data-block-key=\"x7t4c\">In a statement published that day, Times Executive Editor Mark Katches objected to the detentions of Kumar and a second Times journalist, Jay Cridlin, in St. Petersburg the night before. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/tampa-bay-times-reporter-detained-during-st-petersburg-protests/\">documented Cridlin’s arrest here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"p379f\">“Journalists need to be able to do our jobs and report the news without being harassed, detained, intimidated or harmed by law enforcement,” Katches said.</p><p data-block-key=\"h1pdt\">The Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\"> these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": null,
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "",
"arresting_authority": "Tampa Police Department",
"arrest_status": "detained and released without being processed",
"release_date": null,
"detention_date": null,
"unnecessary_use_of_force": true,
"case_number": null,
"case_type": null,
"status_of_seized_equipment": null,
"is_search_warrant_obtained": false,
"actor": null,
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"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
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"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "unknown",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
"subpoena_type": null,
"name_of_business": null,
"third_party_business": null,
"legal_order_venue": null,
"status_of_prior_restraint": null,
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"links": [],
"equipment_seized": [],
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"state": {
"name": "Florida",
"abbreviation": "FL"
},
"updates": [],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge",
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Divya Kumar (Tampa Bay Times)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "New Orleans photographer bruised, thrown to ground by police while covering protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/new-orleans-photographer-bruised-thrown-ground-police-while-covering-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-09-16T20:29:39.235949Z",
"last_published_at": "2022-03-10T22:00:59.810609Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2022-03-10T22:00:59.747797Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
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"city": "New Orleans",
"longitude": -90.07507,
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"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"1kfgj\">Hope Byrd, a New Orleans photographer, says she was assaulted by a police officer who threw her to the ground and into a barricade while she was covering a protest in the city on June 3, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"rqwkt\">Protests that began in Minnesota on May 26 spread across the country, sparked by a video showing a police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest the day before. Floyd was later pronounced dead at a hospital.</p><p data-block-key=\"c3t35\">Byrd, who was on assignment for <a href=\"http://antigravitymagazine.com/\">Antigravity Magazine</a>, was left with bruises and cuts. She temporarily lost some of the use of her left arm after she was physically assaulted by a New Orleans Police Department officer, she told the Committee to Protect Journalists in a phone interview.</p><p data-block-key=\"anirm\">The New Orleans protest began in Duncan Plaza, a small park in the city center, on the night of June 3. At 7 p.m., between 1,000 and 2,000 protesters began marching east to Crescent City Connection, a bridge that spans the Mississippi River. At that point, it was <a href=\"https://www.instagram.com/p/CBAowJrFN1P/\">peaceful</a>, Byrd told CPJ. The police were anticipating the group, and had followed the marchers from the plaza to the on-ramp to the bridge, Byrd said.</p><p data-block-key=\"uq8so\">But at around 9:30 p.m. protesters were underneath the bridge and getting restless. A police barricade prevented them from crossing the bridge. The protest organizers selected two or three people to try and cross the police line and begin negotiations with police, Byrd said.</p><p data-block-key=\"eb966\">“They wanted to be escorted past the bridge, to the other side,” Byrd said. “It seems like a simple gesture, but the SWAT team was not having it.”</p><p data-block-key=\"b86wt\">Shortly before 10 p.m., the confrontation began. Byrd said the police line was breached, and the police started pushing into the crowd. She doesn’t know how or why the line was breached, but protesters were able to get on the other side of the police line. In response, police started firing tear gas.</p><p data-block-key=\"uf8g5\">“I was pushed through [the line]; I don’t know and don’t really remember how I got through,” Byrd said. “I was quickly grabbed and thrown on the ground, which is when I produced my media pass and made it very clear that I was media to an officer. That didn’t seem to help.”</p><p data-block-key=\"pzbm2\">“Between the first and second grab of the officer I produced my already visible media badge. I held it in my hand and put it toward his face, but it didn’t matter,” Byrd said. “I didn’t expect it to, but I felt the need to produce that. That’s when he threw me on the ground, back into the barricade, and into the crowd and into the tear gas.”</p><p data-block-key=\"fwnw2\">Byrd says her press credentials were visible around her neck the whole time. She was also wearing a hat with the word “Antigravity” on it, the name of the magazine she was shooting for.</p><p data-block-key=\"yt3o6\">After examining photos and videos from the altercation, Byrd believes the police officer who assaulted her was the captain of a New Orleans Police Department squad. Byrd said she also witnessed the same officer put a male protester in a chokehold. She did not see the names or badge numbers of any police officers, including the one who assaulted her, she said.</p><p data-block-key=\"v4gev\">“The police at the line, some were talking, some weren’t,” Byrd said. “The officers I addressed, I asked them where their body cam was. I asked them to produce their name and their badge number. To my knowledge and in the photos I have, there’s no identifying anything.”</p><p data-block-key=\"t0egd\">After she ended up on the other side of the police line and back with the protesters, Byrd put her goggles on as her visibility was affected by tear gas. Other photographers were wearing gas masks, but Byrd did not have one. As she was shooting, she heard rubber balls being shot by police. Although they initially denied it, the New Orleans Police Department <a href=\"https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/article_c73d0244-a9dd-11ea-b790-bf6d706f9ed4.html\">confirmed</a> that they used rubber balls against protesters during the city’s protests.</p><p data-block-key=\"gbjf2\">At around 10:40 p.m., the protest organizers began their retreat and Byrd left the scene.</p><p data-block-key=\"kzeuv\">When asked if she thought she was targeted for being a member of the media, Byrd said both yes and no.</p><p data-block-key=\"0thp7\">“The fact that [the police officer] responded with more violence after I said I was media, by making it clear I was media, by showing the credentials [suggests yes],” she said. “Most of the damage was from the second and third throw. At the same time, we see that he’s choke holding other protesters.”</p><p data-block-key=\"ohiti\">Gary S. Scheets, a senior public information officer for the New Orleans Police Department, told CPJ it could not comment on Byrd’s allegations without a police report. Byrd did not file a police report, but she did contact the New Orleans Independent Police Monitor. Byrd said she tried to use the complaint form online, but the link to upload evidence is broken.</p></div>",
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"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"z3mye\">Photographer Hope Byrd supplied this image of injuries sustained while covering a protest against police violence in New Orleans on June 3, 2020.</p>",
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{
"title": "Reporter for AL.com arrested while covering Birmingham protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/reporter-alcom-arrested-while-covering-birmingham-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-08-18T14:56:47.095532Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:44.088125Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:44.002881Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
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"city": "Birmingham",
"longitude": -86.80249,
"latitude": 33.52066,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"dc7rq\">Jonece Starr Dunigan, a journalist with AL.com, was arrested while filming officers outside Birmingham City Hall, in Birmingham, Alabama, on June 3, 2020. After being taken to the city jail for processing, Dunigan was released without charges.</p><p data-block-key=\"s7nbv\">Dunigan was reporting that day with colleague Howard Koplowitz, who was also arrested. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has documented <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/alcom-journalist-arrested-while-covering-birmingham-protests/\">his case here</a>. Both journalists declined to comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"rlqj0\">The protest was held in response to a video showing a Minneapolis police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, for more than eight minutes during an arrest on May 25. Floyd was later pronounced dead at a local hospital. The incident sparked anti-police brutality and Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the country.</p><p data-block-key=\"jyo2a\">Koplowitz <a href=\"https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2020/06/two-reporters-taken-into-custody-after-covering-birmingham-protest.html\">told AL.com</a> that he was recording video of Birmingham Police Department officers walking out of City Hall at around 7:30 p.m., half an hour after the city’s 7 p.m. curfew, when two officers approached him. An officer told Koplowitz he was under arrest, ignoring Koplowitz’s press pass and his verbal protestations that he was a journalist. The officers then arrested Dunigan, who was standing near Koplowitz.</p><p data-block-key=\"9h9da\">AL.com reported that Koplowitz was also carrying letters showing proof of employment for both himself and Dunigan, as required by the city in order for journalists to be exempt from the curfew order. However, the BPD officers who arrested him didn’t allow him to show them the letters.</p><p data-block-key=\"dhpyz\">Koplowitz told AL.com that he and Dunigan were zip-tied and put into a van, which transported them to the city jail. At the jail, he said they were chained to a bench for 10 minutes before BPD public information officer Sergeant Rod Mauldin intervened and had them released. Neither Koplowitz nor Dunigan are facing criminal charges.</p><p data-block-key=\"91qzq\">Mauldin advised the Tracker to direct all questions to the mayor’s office, which did not respond to emails requesting comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"oqbea\">“I never want to call my mom ever again to tell her I was arrested,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/StarrDunigan/status/1268655133568774152\">Dunigan tweeted</a> after she was released. “It was a hard conversation to have. I’m still processing it all.”</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">I never want to call my mom ever again to tell her I was arrested. It was a hard conversation to have. I'm still processing it all. <br><br>I appreciate all the kind texts and messages. I appreciate the protesters who were nothing but kind to me.<a href=\"https://t.co/3RCUUpZppr\">https://t.co/3RCUUpZppr</a></p>— Jonece Starr Dunigan (@StarrDunigan) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/StarrDunigan/status/1268655133568774152?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 4, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"v8uiv\">AL.com editors condemned the journalists’ arrests.</p><p data-block-key=\"vuynp\">“Unacceptable,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/KellyAnnScott/status/1268415677129527302\">tweeted Kelly Ann Scott</a>, AL.com editor and vice president of content. “I’m so sorry that @HowardKoplowitz and @StarrDunigan had to endure this while just doing their jobs as journalists.”</p><p data-block-key=\"2et3q\">“Watching video of a zip-tied reporter cry for someone to call me was agonizing,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/jgray78/status/1268423504384401409\">tweeted Jeremy Gray</a>, AL.com managing producer of breaking news. “I hired @StarrDunigan and have worked with @HowardKoplowitz ever since he joined our team. They were standing on a sidewalk when they were loaded into a van.”</p><p data-block-key=\"esuy9\">On June 5, after another reporter was arrested by BPD officers, Birmingham mayor Randall Woodfin apologized for the BPD’s treatment of journalists.</p><p data-block-key=\"o2ofh\">“Our curfew was not intended to stifle the voices of our people or our press,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/randallwoodfin/status/1268912549933780995\">he wrote on Twitter</a>. “We need them more now than ever.”</p><p data-block-key=\"x935g\">On June 6, Alabama Media Group, the publisher of AL.com and the Birmingham News, asked for an apology and investigation into the arrests, AL.com <a href=\"https://www.al.com/news/2020/06/alabama-media-group-asks-for-investigation-into-birmingham-police-treatment-of-two-reporters.html?outputType=amp\">reported</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"g4bjh\">“Clearly, the police overstepped their legal authority in arresting, assaulting and otherwise mistreating members of the press with no inclination to use any but the most extreme measures,” said James Pewitt, attorney for Alabama Media Group, in a letter sent to Woodfin and others. Pewitt added that the explanations provided by the police “are, in our view, wholly inadequate, plainly false and pretextual.”</p><p data-block-key=\"8vlps\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas, or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
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"name": "Alabama",
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],
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"categories": [
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{
"title": "AL.com journalist arrested while covering Birmingham protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/alcom-journalist-arrested-while-covering-birmingham-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-08-18T14:52:43.365770Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:22.716329Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:22.634693Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Birmingham",
"longitude": -86.80249,
"latitude": 33.52066,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"61mni\">Howard Koplowitz, a journalist with AL.com, was arrested while filming protests in front of Birmingham City Hall, in Birmingham, Alabama, on June 3, 2020. After being taken to the city jail for processing, Koplowitz was released without charges.</p><p data-block-key=\"kurop\">Koplowitz was reporting that day with colleague Jonece Starr Dunigan, who was also arrested. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has documented <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/reporter-alcom-arrested-while-covering-birmingham-protests/\">her arrest here</a>. Both journalists declined to comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"xlvte\">The protest was held in response to a video showing a Minneapolis police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, for more than eight minutes during an arrest on May 25. Floyd was later pronounced dead at a hospital. The incident sparked anti-police brutality and Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the country.</p><p data-block-key=\"f90jp\">Koplowitz had been <a href=\"https://twitter.com/HowardKoplowitz/status/1268336138953068550\">tweeting</a> during the evening, including just after the city’s 7 p.m. curfew. He <a href=\"https://www.al.com/news/birmingham/2020/06/two-reporters-taken-into-custody-after-covering-birmingham-protest.html\">told AL.com</a> that he was recording video of Birmingham Police Department officers walking out of City Hall at around 7:30 p.m., when two officers approached him. An officer told Koplowitz he was under arrest, ignoring Koplowitz’s press pass and his verbal protestations that he was a journalist.</p><p data-block-key=\"x4bs4\">AL.com reported that Koplowitz was also carrying letters showing proof of employment for both himself and Dunigan, as required by the city in order for journalists to be exempt from the curfew order. However, the BPD officers who arrested him didn’t allow him to show them the letters.</p><p data-block-key=\"j7nqe\">Within seconds of approaching Koplowitz, officers also arrested Dunigan, who also was wearing media credentials and standing nearby.</p><p data-block-key=\"ml7ff\">Koplowitz told AL.com that he and Dunigan were zip-tied and put into a van, which transported them to the city jail. At the jail, he said they were photographed and chained to a bench for 10 minutes before BPD Public Information Officer Sergeant Rod Mauldin intervened and had them released. Neither Koplowitz nor Dunigan are facing criminal charges.</p><p data-block-key=\"vkurq\">Koplowitz said he was later told by officers that they had been detained for their safety.</p><p data-block-key=\"nasbd\">Mauldin advised the Tracker to direct all questions to the mayor’s office, which did not respond to emails requesting comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"x6fex\">AL.com editors condemned the journalists’ arrests.</p><p data-block-key=\"cjlwy\">“Unacceptable,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/KellyAnnScott/status/1268415677129527302\">tweeted Kelly Ann Scott</a>, AL.com editor and vice president of content. “I’m so sorry that @HowardKoplowitz and @StarrDunigan had to endure this while just doing their jobs as journalists.”</p><p data-block-key=\"hcr4k\">“Watching video of a zip-tied reporter cry for someone to call me was agonizing,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/jgray78/status/1268423504384401409\">tweeted Jeremy Gray</a>, AL.com managing producer of breaking news. “I hired @StarrDunigan and have worked with @HowardKoplowitz ever since he joined our team. They were standing on a sidewalk when they were loaded into a van.”</p><p data-block-key=\"uunj1\">On June 5, after another reporter was arrested by BPD officers, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin apologized for the BPD’s treatment of journalists.</p><p data-block-key=\"av5mz\">“Our curfew was not intended to stifle the voices of our people or our press,” <a href=\"https://twitter.com/randallwoodfin/status/1268912549933780995\">he wrote on Twitter</a>. “We need them more now than ever.”</p><p data-block-key=\"wjufx\">On June 6, Alabama Media Group, the publisher of AL.com and the Birmingham News, asked for an apology and investigation into the arrests, AL.com <a href=\"https://www.al.com/news/2020/06/alabama-media-group-asks-for-investigation-into-birmingham-police-treatment-of-two-reporters.html?outputType=amp\">reported</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"5y43p\">“Clearly, the police overstepped their legal authority in arresting, assaulting and otherwise mistreating members of the press with no inclination to use any but the most extreme measures,” said James Pewitt, attorney for Alabama Media Group, in a letter sent to Woodfin and others. Pewitt added that the explanations provided by the police “are, in our view, wholly inadequate, plainly false and pretextual.”</p><p data-block-key=\"rqw29\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas, or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
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"name": "Alabama",
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{
"title": "Mission Local journalist detained with protesters while covering Bay Area demonstration",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/mission-local-journalist-detained-protesters-while-covering-bay-area-demonstration/",
"first_published_at": "2020-07-05T21:42:17.399587Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-10T20:26:37.266458Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-10T20:26:37.191054Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "San Francisco",
"longitude": -122.41942,
"latitude": 37.77493,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"fdoqp\">Mission Local reporter Julian Mark was briefly detained by San Francisco police while covering a Bay Area protest on June 3, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"xqgtm\">The protest was part of a wave of Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality demonstrations across the country. The demonstrations were sparked by the release of a video showing a white Minneapolis police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest. Floyd was later pronounced dead in a hospital.</p><p data-block-key=\"w1wm9\">Mark told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that he had been covering the San Francisco protests all day as about 10,000 people marched through the city. He had returned to Mission Local’s office at 2489 Mission St. to file his story when he saw dozens of officers outside the office window. The officers were moving down Mission Street and closing in on dozens of protesters, including <a href=\"https://missionlocal.org/2020/06/sfpd-chief-defends-arrest-of-23-protesters-on-mission-street/\">23 who were later arrested</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"vhfx0\">Mark said he went back outside wearing his press badge, issued by the San Francisco Police Department, around his neck. When he began filming police, he said he held his press badge up so officers could see it. While recording, Mark got in front of the officers as they closed in on some of the protesters.</p><p data-block-key=\"9pflb\">“I was putting myself in the middle of the circle and as I was doing this I was making it known that I was press and I was also filming,” Mark told the Tracker. One of the officers told Mark to move back. “I tried to get out of the circle and I tried to get onto the sidewalk,” Mark said, but other officers – at odds with the original instruction – kept him in the circle of protesters on Mission Street.</p><p data-block-key=\"9t9no\">“I was definitely forcibly moved into the circle of protesters and told to lay on my stomach even though I had clearly displayed my press badge,” Mark said.</p><p data-block-key=\"ozs64\">At 10:53 p.m. Mark <a href=\"https://twitter.com/badjujusf/status/1268420712986902529\">tweeted</a>, “Lying on the ground here with a dozen protesters. Completely surrounded on mission st.” In the video accompanying the tweet, dozens of officers are visible. Capt. Gaetano Caltagirone of SFPD can be heard saying, “This is Capt. Gaetano from the San Francisco Police Department. You are all under arrest for unlawful assembly.”</p><p data-block-key=\"qjnoj\">Mark continued to tweet updates from the ground. “Show them my press pass and they just pushed me into the circle and made [me] lie down on my stomach,” he tweeted five minutes later. The last tweet in Mark’s thread was sent at 11:47 p.m. “I was detained and then released. I’m okay. Thanks, all, for following. There are around 20 seemingly peaceful protesters on their way to the police station, including a 14-year-old [boy].”</p><p data-block-key=\"i9zfp\">The certificate of release provided by the San Francisco Police Department lists Mark’s time in custody from 11 p.m. to 11:41 p.m. The next day Mark <a href=\"https://missionlocal.org/2020/06/sfpd-chief-defends-arrest-of-23-protesters-on-mission-street/\">reported</a> on his detainment, writing that he was released after an editor at Mission Local reached out to Capt. Caltagirone.</p><p data-block-key=\"bjquh\">On June 4, Mark also received an invitation from San Francisco Police Chief William “Bill” Scott to come to his office and review the body camera footage from the incident.</p><p data-block-key=\"yujgl\">“He explicitly said that he was sorry that it had happened,” Mark told the Tracker. “He asked for feedback from me about how the police department would improve its processes with how they deal with journalists in situations where officers feel they are under pressure to enforce the law. I really think that the effort was genuine on his part.”</p><p data-block-key=\"d24j2\">SFPD spokesman Sgt. Michael Andraychak gave the following statement to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker: “The Department is aware of these incidents and we have either met with or spoken to the journalists involved in order to gain a better picture of what transpired and how we can work to prevent similar events from happening in the future.”</p><p data-block-key=\"bdszq\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country related to the death of George Floyd while in police custody. Find all of these cases <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
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"state": {
"name": "California",
"abbreviation": "CA"
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"kettle",
"protest"
],
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"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge"
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"targeted_journalists": [
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{
"title": "NYPD hits journalist with batons, confiscates his bike",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/nypd-hits-journalist-batons-confiscates-his-bike/",
"first_published_at": "2020-06-22T16:59:42.048749Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:03.655629Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:47:03.556540Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "New York",
"longitude": -74.00597,
"latitude": 40.71427,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"4yn72\">Tablet Magazine senior reporter Armin Rosen was beaten by police, who then confiscated his bicycle, while he was covering protests in New York, New York, on June 3, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"kkkeu\">Protests that began in Minnesota on May 26 spread across the country, sparked by a video showing a police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest the day before. Floyd was later pronounced dead at a hospital.</p><p data-block-key=\"dyybf\">Rosen told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that he was covering a protest march in downtown Brooklyn shortly after 9 p.m. New York Police Department officers had been gradually pushing the crowd toward Borough Hall but quickened their advance when a sudden downpour began.</p><p data-block-key=\"ff5m0\">Rosen — who had with him a reporting notebook, backpack, bicycle and helmet wrapped in white duct tape with “PRESS” emblazoned across it — walked his bike over to a nearby structure to take cover from the rain and put his notebook away so it wouldn’t be damaged.</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">Still got my helmet though! (Tape etc applied by <a href=\"https://twitter.com/BenFeibleman?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@BenFeibleman</a> last night) <a href=\"https://t.co/M5zw2Bie26\">pic.twitter.com/M5zw2Bie26</a></p>— Armin Rosen (@ArminRosen) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/ArminRosen/status/1268360074168336384?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 4, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"wnfr4\">“Facing the structure, and thus with my back to the crowd, I felt a blunt object strike my right shoulder and very quickly realized I was on the grass and surrounded by police,” Rosen said.</p><p data-block-key=\"nt4lx\">He added that he is unsure how many times officers struck him with their batons in total.</p><p data-block-key=\"4o8o7\">Three officers held him down while another demanded, “What the fuck is in your bag?” The officer then quickly searched the backpack as Rosen explained that he was a journalist and had been concerned about his notebook getting wet. Rosen said the officers did not ask him to produce any identification.</p><p data-block-key=\"fblgf\">Rosen said another officer said, “Take your shit and get the fuck out of here,” and threw the still-open bag toward him.</p><p data-block-key=\"fru2g\">“Once back on my feet, I was aggressively pushed forwards by a nearby cop and nearly fell to the ground again,” Rosen said.</p><p data-block-key=\"xdesb\">That’s when Rosen said he realized that his bike was gone. When Rosen asked if the officers could return his bike, an officer responded, “It’s not your bike anymore.”</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">Cops clubbed me and took my bike what the he’ll do I do</p>— Armin Rosen (@ArminRosen) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/ArminRosen/status/1268350880115458051?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 4, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"zb54z\">Rosen told the Tracker that he asked if there was a number he could call in order to recover the bike, but both the officers who had surrounded him and a man who appeared to be a commanding officer dismissed or ignored his requests.</p><p data-block-key=\"j97ct\">“I currently have a large welt on my right shoulder from the initial blow, along with a second area of pain in my left buttock,” Rosen said.</p><p data-block-key=\"8rlms\">Rosen told the Tracker that a fellow journalist found his bike more or less abandoned near Borough Hall along with multiple others a few hours after it was taken, and was able to return it to Rosen.</p><p data-block-key=\"z2wb6\">When asked for comment, an NYPD spokesperson directed the Tracker to the “30-minute mark” of <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6eUFc_kltc\">a press briefing</a> held by New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and Police Commissioner Dermot Shea on June 3.</p><p data-block-key=\"eqyen\">Around that point in the recording, Shea says: “Wherever appropriate, we issue summonses in lieu of arrests. We’ve obviously done a lot of both summonses and arrests. The only thing that I might add on the point of the press: We’re doing the best we can, the difficult situation. We 100 percent respect the rights of the press. Unfortunately, we’ve had some people purporting to be press that are actually lying, if you can believe that. So sometimes these things take a second—maybe too long—to sort out.”</p><p data-block-key=\"8nyx5\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred total incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering Black Lives Matter protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
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"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"e042v\">A man scuffles with law enforcement officers during a protest in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on June 3, 2020.</p>",
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{
"quantity": 1,
"equipment": "bicycle"
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{
"quantity": 1,
"equipment": "equipment bag"
}
],
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"state": {
"name": "New York",
"abbreviation": "NY"
},
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"protest"
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"Equipment Search or Seizure"
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"Armin Rosen (Tablet Magazine)"
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{
"title": "National Guard uses pepper spray against CNN journalist covering DC protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/national-guard-uses-pepper-spray-against-cnn-journalist-covering-dc-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2021-10-19T16:17:42.591760Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:43:59.291820Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:43:59.203926Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
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"city": "Washington",
"longitude": -77.03637,
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"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"fwrui\">CNN journalists Josh Replogle and Alexander Marquardt were pepper sprayed by National Guard troops on June 3, 2020, while covering early-morning protests in Washington, D.C. near Lafayette Square.</p><p data-block-key=\"t91m2\">Replogle and Marquardt were covering one of the many protests that erupted in Washington and other U.S cities following the May 25 death of George Floyd while he was in custody of Minneapolis police.</p><p data-block-key=\"eregl\">Marquardt, senior national security correspondent for CNN, <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarquardtA/status/1268135590685552641?s=20\">tweeted on June 3</a> that a group of individuals attempted just after 12:30 a.m. to push down a fence erected around Lafayette Square. National Guard troops at the scene “responded with pepper spray and rounds,” Marquardt tweeted, without explaining what types of rounds the troops used.</p><p data-block-key=\"7bo5k\">Replogle was operating a camera for CNN’s reporting from the scene. Marquardt said in a tweet thread that troops fired pepper spray at his team despite the fact that the journalists <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarquardtA/status/1268294692741025800?s=20\">weren’t standing near protesters</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"06lbv\">He also said that because he was holding a microphone, and Replogle was holding a large camera, it should have been clear that they were press, covering the protest.</p><p data-block-key=\"uz9i6\">Mark Irons, a correspondent for the Catholic-themed Eternal Word Television Network, <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarkIronsMedia/status/1268044092480671744?s=20\">tweeted that National Guard troops</a> fired rubber bullets at the crowd gathered at Lafayette Square around the time that Marquardt and Replogle were hit with pepper spray.</p><p data-block-key=\"iqqgw\">Irons also posted a video depicting troops firing pepper spray at protesters who lowered themselves to their knees and raised their hands.</p><p data-block-key=\"1aky7\">Replogle and Marquardt didn’t respond to requests by the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker for comment and CNN didn’t comment on the incident further. The District of Columbia National Guard also didn’t respond to a request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"bq9a5\">Two days earlier, on June 1, President Trump had used St. John’s Episcopal Church at Lafayette Square as the backdrop for a controversial photo op. National Guard troops used tear gas and pepper balls to clear protesters from the area before Trump posed for cameras while holding up a Bible. Tall fences were erected in the park after protesters were expelled, but the protesters later returned to the park area.</p><p data-block-key=\"xj279\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
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{
"title": "National Guard uses pepper spray against CNN reporter covering DC protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/national-guard-uses-pepper-spray-against-cnn-reporter-covering-dc-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-12-22T19:13:18.776513Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:43:33.284557Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:43:33.196902Z",
"date": "2020-06-03",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Washington",
"longitude": -77.03637,
"latitude": 38.89511,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"gpn6m\">CNN journalists Alexander Marquardt and Josh Replogle were pepper sprayed by National Guard troops on June 3, 2020, while covering early-morning protests in Washington, D.C., near Lafayette Square.</p><p data-block-key=\"547ey\">Marquardt and Replogle were covering one of the many protests that erupted in Washington and other U.S cities following the May 25 death of George Floyd while he was in custody of Minneapolis police.</p><p data-block-key=\"tj1pi\">Marquardt, senior national security correspondent for CNN, <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarquardtA/status/1268135590685552641?s=20\">tweeted on June 3</a> that a group of individuals attempted just after 12:30 a.m. to push down a fence erected around Lafayette Square. National Guard troops at the scene “responded with pepper spray and rounds,” Marquardt tweeted, without explaining what types of rounds the troops used.</p><p data-block-key=\"r6eb3\">“An otherwise peaceful day that ends with unrest,” Marquardt tweeted. “I really don’t know how that helped anything.”</p><p data-block-key=\"bptph\">Replogle was operating a camera for CNN’s reporting from the scene. Marquardt said in a tweet thread that troops fired pepper spray at his team despite the fact that the journalists <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarquardtA/status/1268294692741025800?s=20\">weren’t standing near protesters</a>.</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">Another angle that shows how separated from agitators we were and how obvious it was we were press. <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Joshrepp?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@Joshrepp</a> and I were with <a href=\"https://twitter.com/JayMcMichaelCNN?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@JayMcMichaelCNN</a> and <a href=\"https://twitter.com/cnnjamie?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@cnnjamie</a>. <a href=\"https://t.co/IhU2x5K2x7\">https://t.co/IhU2x5K2x7</a></p>— Alexander Marquardt (@MarquardtA) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarquardtA/status/1268294692741025800?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"1tcym\">He also said that because he was holding a microphone, and Replogle was holding a large camera, it should have been clear that they were press, covering the protest.</p><p data-block-key=\"ckoac\">“3 hours later my arm was still burning,” Marquardt tweeted. “Others got it far worse.”</p><p data-block-key=\"7xc5z\">Mark Irons, a correspondent for the Catholic-themed Eternal Word Television Network, <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MarkIronsMedia/status/1268044092480671744?s=20\">tweeted that National Guard troops</a> fired rubber bullets at the crowd gathered at Lafayette Square around the time that Marquardt and Replogle were hit with pepper spray.</p><p data-block-key=\"fmhxj\">Irons also posted a video depicting troops firing pepper spray at protesters who lowered themselves to their knees and raised their hands.</p><p data-block-key=\"u5wn7\">Marquardt and Replogle didn’t respond to requests by the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker for comment and CNN didn’t comment on the incident further. The District of Columbia National Guard also didn’t respond to a request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"j3cdd\">Two days earlier, on June 1, President Trump had used St. John’s Episcopal Church at Lafayette Square as the backdrop for a controversial photo op. National Guard troops used tear gas and pepper balls to clear protesters from the area before Trump posed for cameras while holding up a Bible. Tall fences were erected in the park after protesters were expelled, but the protesters later returned to the park area.</p><p data-block-key=\"wu8k9\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
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{
"title": "AP video journalist shoved by NYPD, prevented from covering protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/ap-video-journalist-shoved-by-nypd-prevented-from-covering-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2021-10-19T15:54:19.822735Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:49:56.887806Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:49:56.804914Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "New York",
"longitude": -74.00597,
"latitude": 40.71427,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"d3lx7\">Two journalists for The Associated Press were assaulted by law enforcement officers and ordered to leave the scene of protests in New York, New York, on June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"w71hm\">Protests that began in Minnesota on May 26 have spread across the country, sparked by a video showing a police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest the day before. Floyd was later pronounced dead at a hospital.</p><p data-block-key=\"f89u1\">The AP <a href=\"https://apnews.com/1d2d9e4afdd822b27bfcce570e0cbdb5\">reported</a> that video journalist Robert Bumsted and photojournalist Maye-E Wong were documenting protests in lower Manhattan shortly after the 8 p.m. curfew took effect. Members of the media were <a href=\"https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/home/downloads/pdf/executive-orders/2020/eeo-118.pdf\">exempted</a> from the order as “essential workers.”</p><p data-block-key=\"627vl\">In a <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1foAAYPb7kk&feature=youtu.be\">video</a> captured by Bumsted, more than half a dozen officers can be seen confronting the journalists and ordering them to clear the street along with all the demonstrators in the area.</p><p data-block-key=\"z8c18\">“Thank you. Have a good day. Go the fuck home,” one officer can be heard saying.</p><p data-block-key=\"6ec74\">Bumsted, who declined to comment, can be heard responding that they are essential workers and are therefore exempt from the curfew. The AP reported that both were wearing press credentials and repeatedly identified themselves as media.</p><p data-block-key=\"3xsxy\">An officer responds, “I don’t give a shit.” Another can be heard repeatedly shouting, “Who are you essential to?”</p><p data-block-key=\"67248\">The AP reported that officers repeatedly shoved both journalists toward Bumsted’s nearby car, separating them from each other. At one point, officers pinned Bumsted against his car.</p><p data-block-key=\"ay4i8\">In the video, an officer can be heard telling Bumsted, “You need to get in your car and get out of here.”</p><p data-block-key=\"9qvbc\">Bumsted responds that he needs the keys, which Wong was carrying, so the officers allow her to approach the vehicle.</p><p data-block-key=\"v5o9s\">As Bumsted appears to get into his car, he can be heard saying, “Don’t be like that. Respect the press.”</p><p data-block-key=\"3sjbk\">The New York Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"ygg38\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
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{
"title": "Spectrum News reporter hit by police projectile amid San Antonio protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/spectrum-news-reporter-hit-by-police-projectile-amid-san-antonio-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2021-10-19T16:08:24.074357Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:50:17.113368Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:50:17.032415Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "San Antonio",
"longitude": -98.49363,
"latitude": 29.42412,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"omltm\">Spectrum News reporter Lena Blietz was hit by crowd-control munitions fired by law enforcement officers who were attempting to disperse protesters in downtown San Antonio, Texas, on the evening of June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"qz26l\">Protesters had gathered in San Antonio and in cities across the U.S. to denounce the police killing of George Floyd, a Black man who died while being arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 25.</p><p data-block-key=\"si9c9\">In San Antonio, demonstrators were marching towards the Alamo, a symbolic site where in 1836 a vastly outnumbered group of Texan settlers were besieged in the mission by 1,500 Mexican troops.</p><p data-block-key=\"xslth\">Blietz was on the scene as protesters gathered by a line of police officers wearing riot gear in front of Alamo Plaza, a commercial center next to the historic mission.</p><p data-block-key=\"dtftg\">Blietz told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that the protest was “super peaceful.” As some protesters took a knee and one addressed the crowd near the police line, Blietz said she thought she was about to witness officers and protesters embracing — something that had happened in Fort Worth, Texas, the previous night.</p><p data-block-key=\"xs7u2\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/LenaBlietz/status/1268034667770511362\">A video captured by Blietz</a> showed a man standing in front of riot police telling protesters, “put your hands up — let everybody know we’re not here for violence!”</p><p data-block-key=\"m6hky\">As he said that, there is a commotion alongside several bangs and the sound of crowd-control munitions being fired as people scramble to flee.</p><p data-block-key=\"unmny\">“Eventually they brought out the tear gas and the rubber bullets or pepper bullets, whatever they’re using,”<a href=\"https://twitter.com/lenablietz/status/1268028045425852416\"> said Blietz in a video recorded after the incident</a>. “I was shot in the leg but I’m fine,” she wrote on Twitter.</p><p data-block-key=\"nxtk6\">Blietz’s polo shirt and hat were emblazoned with the Spectrum News logo and she wore press credentials around her neck. She said she had been standing between protesters and police before law enforcement tried to disperse the crowd, and that she was clearly identifiable as media.</p><p data-block-key=\"ien0z\">In a <a href=\"https://twitter.com/LenaBlietz/status/1268309812426784772\">photo of a welt</a> on the back of her thigh the next day, she wrote: “It looks like I was standing in a batting cage.”</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">Thank you to everyone who’s reached out and I’ll get back to all of you soon.<br><br>Here’s an update on my thigh from the non-lethal bullet shot by SAPD SWAT last night.<br><br>It looks like I was standing in a batting cage.<a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/BlackLivesMatter?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#BlackLivesMatter</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/SanAntonioProtest?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#SanAntonioProtest</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/rubberbullets?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#rubberbullets</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/protests2020?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#protests2020</a> <a href=\"https://t.co/DsEpcKtYBb\">pic.twitter.com/DsEpcKtYBb</a></p>— Lena Blietz (@LenaBlietz) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/LenaBlietz/status/1268309812426784772?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"c1a0d\">“The next day I basically couldn’t walk it hurt so much,” she told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"cuorh\">San Antonio Express-News reporter Mark Dunphy, who was standing near Blietz when police moved to disperse protesters, also was hit. The Tracker has documented that case <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/san-antonio-express-news-reporter-hit-by-projectiles-while-covering-protests/\">here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"23b2y\">In another tweet, he wrote that he saw a plastic bottle thrown at police shortly before officers began firing wooden rounds and using tear gas. In a video shared by Dunphy that night, dots from laser pointers aimed at police officers can be seen. Blietz can be seen standing directly in front of police, filming a protester’s address to the crowd.</p><p data-block-key=\"e2su9\">“It is my understanding that two local journalists were hit during the crowd dispersal,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said <a href=\"https://www.sanantonio.gov/SAPD/Press-Releases/ArtMID/7184/ArticleID/19022/Statement-from-San-Antonio-Police-Chief\">in a June 3 statement</a>. “Although this was unfortunate, this was certainly not the police department’s intent. During crowd control dispersal action officers cannot readily distinguish between peaceful protesters, media and agitators once the situation has reached a boiling point.”</p><p data-block-key=\"u9edf\">McManus added that the police department was and would continue offering journalists the opportunity to cover protests from a “safe zone” behind the line of officers. The police chief advised journalists who cover protests from within crowds to leave if the situation becomes volatile.</p><p data-block-key=\"5com6\">A public information officer for the San Antonio Police Department said they had no additional statement.</p><p data-block-key=\"vz3jd\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
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"name": "Texas",
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"shot / shot at"
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{
"title": "Portland journalist assaulted by police while covering protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/portland-journalist-assaulted-police-while-covering-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-11-03T17:56:11.455839Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-10T20:27:52.954114Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-10T20:27:52.868695Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Portland",
"longitude": -122.67621,
"latitude": 45.52345,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"z039s\">Cory Elia, an editor at Village Portland and host of a KBOO podcast, told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that he was assaulted by police on June 2, 2020, in Portland, Oregon, despite clearly identifying himself as press.</p><p data-block-key=\"rvdl6\">The protest was one of many that broke out across the U.S. in response to police violence and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement following the May 25 death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The Tracker is <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">documenting assaults, arrests and other incidents</a> involving journalists covering protests across the country.</p><p data-block-key=\"6eu4v\">In Portland, nightly protests over the death of Floyd began on May 29, prompting Mayor Ted Wheeler to declare an 8 p.m. curfew that lasted three days. Even after the curfew was lifted, journalists continued to be targeted by police, according to a class action suit the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Oregon filed against the Portland Police Bureau in June.The city agreed to <a href=\"https://aclu-or.org/sites/default/files/field_documents/2020-07-16_preliminary_injunction.pdf\">a preliminary injunction</a> in July to not to arrest or harm any journalists or legal observers of the protests or impede their work.</p><p data-block-key=\"yckx2\">“The police physically assaulted KBOO reporter Cory Elia because he was recording them,” the <a href=\"https://aclu-or.org/sites/default/files/field_documents/woodstock_portland_aclu_or_06282020.pdf\">complaint</a> said.</p><p data-block-key=\"6lrd3\">On June 2 at 11:34 p.m., Elia posted a <a href=\"https://twitter.com/TheRealCoryElia/status/1268068558568710150\">video</a> of protesters running from the police, who can be heard declaring the protest an unlawful assembly. Projectiles can be seen landing between the protesters as they run through tear gas, while flash bangs can also be heard.</p><p data-block-key=\"s3vb9\">About 10 minutes later, Elia <a href=\"https://twitter.com/TheRealCoryElia/status/1268071609920716802\">tweeted</a>, “I just got manhandled by police after filming this one even while identifying myself as a journalist and showing my press pass. They slammed me into a wall as I was choking on teargas. An independent journo pulled me away from officers and got me out.”</p><p data-block-key=\"arcdv\">Elia told the Tracker that an officer struck him in the back with a baton, and then he was slammed into the wall head first. He fell over his bicycle and hit his ribs on the handlebars, then officers kicked him as he choked on tear gas, he said.</p><p data-block-key=\"zr71e\">A <a href=\"https://twitter.com/caffeinedtv/status/1268079034321133570\">video</a> recorded by reddit user testsubject011 shows part of the assault. The person recording the video approaches Elia, who is straddling his bicycle and holding up his press pass. “I’m a journalist, I’m a journalist. If they start messing with me just keep chasing them,” says Elia, before warning, “They’re coming behind you.”</p><p data-block-key=\"lif0t\">The person continues to record while retreating from police. When Elia comes back into view about 24 seconds into the video, he appears to get pinned against the wall by police.</p><p data-block-key=\"i2k1q\">“If these instances are not seen, not heard about, not reported, they can continue. It results in a very dangerous situation. Any reporter out there can be subjected to this treatment without any kind of consequence or accountability for those actions,” Elia told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"m2x43\">On July 8, Elia and Lesley McLam, a colleague at Village Portland and KBOO radio station, filed a <a href=\"https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2020/07/two-independent-journalists-file-suit-against-portland-police-county-sheriffs-deputies-and-state-police.html\">civil lawsuit</a> against the city, the state, and multiple law enforcement officers for allegedly violating their constitutional rights and for battery, assault, negligence and false arrest. They are also seeking compensation for their injuries and punitive damages.</p><p data-block-key=\"e1kyz\">The PPB has said they wouldn't comment on incidents involving journalists covering the protests, citing continuing litigation.</p><p data-block-key=\"qmb2l\"><i>Editor's Note: This article has been updated to reflect that Cory Elia is not a plaintiff in the ACLU of Oregon's lawsuit, but filed an independent civil rights suit with journalist Lesley McLam.</i></p></div>",
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"state": {
"name": "Oregon",
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"(2022-04-28 00:00:00+00:00) City of Portland pays two journalists $55,000 to settle lawsuit stemming from arrests, assaults at protests in 2020",
"(2022-07-29 13:19:00+00:00) Independent journalist receives $50,000 to settle lawsuit stemming from arrest, assaults at protests in 2020"
],
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],
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"chemical irritant",
"protest"
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"categories": [
"Assault"
],
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{
"title": "Detroit Metro Times journalist assaulted while covering civil unrest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/detroit-metro-times-journalist-assaulted-while-covering-civil-unrest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-30T14:33:09.798523Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:52:21.983521Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:52:21.892309Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Detroit",
"longitude": -83.04575,
"latitude": 42.33143,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"4srue\">On the evening of June 2, 2020, Detroit police <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MCmuckraker/status/1267982859991728130\">assaulted Steve Neavling</a>, a journalist with the Detroit Metro Times who was covering protests against police violence, Neavling told the Committee to Protect Journalists in a phone interview.</p><p data-block-key=\"zie0x\">Neavling told CPJ that he and other reporters were watching a group of about 150 peaceful protesters along Gratiot Avenue on Detroit's east side when police surrounded the protesters and moved in on them. The journalist said that he was filming the scene when a police officer grabbed him and threw him to the ground.</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">Just got attacked, punched, kneed and elbowed by police, who threw my phone and broke my glasses. More worried about the protesters. Mass arrests. Out of control in Detroit. That was police brutality. <a href=\"https://t.co/o4dSZ8uMVN\">pic.twitter.com/o4dSZ8uMVN</a></p>— Motor City Muckraker (@MCmuckraker) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MCmuckraker/status/1267982859991728130?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"hq8u7\">“I yelled ‘I’m with the media!’ and [the officer] immediately threw me down, swatted my phone out of my hand and, intentionally or not, ripped the glasses off of my face and they were broken,” Neavling said. “My camera lens was broken during the fall and every time I [said] ‘media,’ I got kicked, punched and elbowed by the same officer,” Neavling told CPJ, adding that his accreditation was visible.</p><p data-block-key=\"30ikc\">Neavling said the officer warned him he would be arrested. Neavling said he then heard another voice saying Neavling should be let go.</p><p data-block-key=\"w1bk3\">“I started walking away without my glasses. I couldn’t see and [the assaulting police officer] kept yelling ‘Get the fuck out of here,’” Neavling said.</p><p data-block-key=\"0qf16\">The journalist, who said he is unable to see clearly further than two feet without his glasses, heard someone say that the police chief was nearby. Neavling said he approached the chief, told him what happened and was told by the chief to speak with the police internal affairs unit.</p><p data-block-key=\"v5yyc\">Neavling said he called the communications point person for Detroit police, who put him in touch with the internal affairs department. An officer in internal affairs was dismissive of Neavling’s complaints and said police had thousands of cases to work through, the journalist told CPJ. Neavling told CPJ in an email on October 13 that he filed a complaint the night of the assault, but four months later had not heard back.</p><p data-block-key=\"kgm3t\">Sgt. Nicole Kirkwood from the Detroit Police Deparment’s media relations team did not respond to CPJ’s request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"9heu8\">Neavling said that due to COVID-related restrictions he had to wait a week before he could get a new pair of glasses, during which time he was unable to work because he could not see well without his glasses. He also said that he sustained bruises and small scrapes on his right elbow and right shoulder.</p><p data-block-key=\"9tewk\">The protests in Detroit that day were held in response to a video showing a white police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during a May 25 arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Floyd was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Protests against police brutality and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have been held across the United States since the end of May.</p><p data-block-key=\"knefm\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists being assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or having their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
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"name": "Michigan",
"abbreviation": "MI"
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"tags": [
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"protest"
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"categories": [
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{
"title": "Freelance photographer assaulted by police while covering Detroit protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/freelance-photographer-assaulted-by-police-while-covering-detroit-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-29T19:35:19.139901Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:48:06.534403Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:48:06.390607Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Detroit",
"longitude": -83.04575,
"latitude": 42.33143,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"m6018\">Freelance photographer Sean Work was assaulted by police officers while covering protests against police violence in Detroit, Michigan, on June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"9ftp5\">Work told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker in an email that he had been following protesters as they marched through downtown that evening. At 8:47 p.m., after a curfew went into effect, Work said he’d been taking photos of police arresting protesters, with his two media passes prominently displayed — one hanging on a lanyard around his neck and another taped to his camera bag. An officer, he said, then came up behind him and forced him to the ground, while a second climbed on top of him while he was lying faceup.</p><p data-block-key=\"mwkgb\">Work said he screamed, “I’m media,” several times while holding up his credential. “Another officer then said ‘he’s media.’ The officer got off of me.”</p><p data-block-key=\"lfqli\">Work said he was then ordered to move back from the scene.</p><p data-block-key=\"u7i1h\">The Detroit Police Department did not respond to multiple requests for comment as of press time.</p><p data-block-key=\"k7eyx\">Protests in the city that day were in response to a video showing a white police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25. Protests against police brutality and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have been held across the United States since the end of May.</p><p data-block-key=\"leqg3\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
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"name": "Michigan",
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"tags": [
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},
{
"title": "Journalist arrested during Houston protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/journalist-arrested-during-houston-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-29T12:11:04.138281Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:47:47.119313Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:47:47.029711Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Houston",
"longitude": -95.36327,
"latitude": 29.76328,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"4pka8\">Derrick Broze, co-host of Free Thinker Radio on 90.1 KPFT and a freelance reporter, was arrested in downtown Houston, Texas, while documenting protests on June 2, 2020, according to his and other news accounts of events.</p><p data-block-key=\"jspw8\">Protests in Houston were held in response to the death of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25. Floyd grew up in Houston’s Third Ward and lived in Texas until around 2014, Texas Monthly magazine <a href=\"https://www.texasmonthly.com/news/houston-years-george-floyd-dj-screw/\">reported</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"u19x3\">In a <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/derrickbroze/videos/550241452519771\">video posted to Facebook</a>, Broze narrates that protesters were near the intersection of McKinney Street and Avenida De Las Americas when some individuals began throwing bottles at a dense line of advancing officers.</p><p data-block-key=\"xqqru\">A few minutes later, Broze can be heard saying, “They’re coming on both sides, they’re closing us in.”</p><p data-block-key=\"r7wj4\">In an <a href=\"https://www.thelastamericanvagabond.com/im-a-journalist-i-was-arrested-while-covering-a-george-floyd-protest-in-houston/\">account</a> written for The Last American Vagabond, Broze said that he had been documenting the protests for approximately five hours before police declared the demonstration an unlawful assembly.</p><p data-block-key=\"4we02\">“The police – dressed in riot gear and armed with live ammunition – surrounded the protesters, medics, and yours truly using a tactic known as ‘kettling,’” Broze wrote. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has documented the arrests and assaults of other journalists within kettles <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/?tags=kettle\">here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"67qtp\">Houston police officers surrounded the group of around 50 protesters and began “violently rushing into the crowd and grabbing people,” according to Broze’s account.</p><p data-block-key=\"osoxz\">“During the chaos I told several officers I was press documenting the situation,” he wrote. “I was told over and over that I should take it up with the courts.”</p><p data-block-key=\"ftawq\">In Broze’s footage, he can be heard identifying himself as a member of the press multiple times and asking whether he can be released from the kettle or speak to a public information officer.</p><p data-block-key=\"x98ry\">Broze <a href=\"https://twitter.com/DBrozeLiveFree/status/1268266166247739392\">tweeted</a> the following day that he was among the individuals “snatched” and thrown to the ground when placed under arrest. His footage of the incident ends before he is placed under arrest.</p><p data-block-key=\"vetfr\">Broze added that he was charged with “obstructing a highway/passageway.”</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">breaking the law. However, me and the other 2 dozen people I was kidnapped with were kettled in by the police as they violently snatched protesters, throwing some to the ground, including me. I was charged with "obstructing a highway/passageway" for being on the sidewalk.</p>— Derrick Broze (@DBrozeLiveFree) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/DBrozeLiveFree/status/1268266166247739392?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"9hx03\">In his account of the incident, Broze wrote that he was taken to Harris County Jail and held there for 16 hours.</p><p data-block-key=\"daci7\">The Houston Police Department did not respond to a voicemail requesting comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"wy5dn\">Broze wrote, “As a journalist (and an opponent of police violence) I will continue to document the George Floyd protests and other important movements in the United States.”</p><p data-block-key=\"gbtvf\">The Harris County District Attorney’s Office dismissed nearly 800 charges on June 9 against individuals at demonstrations “in the interest of justice,” the Houston Chronicle <a href=\"https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Harris-County-DA-files-dismissals-for-some-15328665.php\">reported</a>. The DA’s office did not respond to a request to verify that the arrest charges against Broze were among those dropped, but the Tracker is marking as such barring further information.</p><p data-block-key=\"t1dad\">The Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": "https://media.pressfreedomtracker.us/media/images/RTS3A7Y6.2e16d0ba.fill-1330x880.jpg",
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"q63gq\">Protesters march at a rally for George Floyd on June 2, 2020, in Houston, Texas.</p>",
"arresting_authority": "Houston Police Department",
"arrest_status": "arrested and released",
"release_date": "2020-06-03",
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"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "unknown",
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"state": {
"name": "Texas",
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"kettle",
"protest"
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"categories": [
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{
"title": "Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reporter hit while covering protests in Iowa",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/waterloo-cedar-falls-courier-reporter-hit-while-covering-protests-iowa/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-22T17:36:29.712966Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:51:39.112894Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:51:39.019789Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Waterloo",
"longitude": -92.34296,
"latitude": 42.49276,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"qdett\">Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier staff writer Jeff Reinitz was struck in the back of the head while covering a protest in Waterloo, Iowa, late on the night of June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"gx5jc\">Reinitz was attacked during protests sparked by the police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, in Minneapolis on May 25. A juvenile was later arrested on charges related to the assault on the journalist, the Courier reported.</p><p data-block-key=\"xn4nu\">Reinitz told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that he was covering a march through downtown Waterloo on the night of June 2 when a man started shouting at him to leave.</p><p data-block-key=\"8ui4c\">In a video Reinitz livestreamed of the march <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/wcfcourier/videos/941431929639652\">on Facebook</a>, a man can be heard identifying him as an employee of the Courier. “You can’t walk with us, bro,” he shouted. Reinitz responded that he was doing his job.</p><p data-block-key=\"pqh7l\">“You work for the police,” the man said, pointing at Reinitz. “No, I don’t,” the journalist responded.</p><p data-block-key=\"ug818\">Reinitz, who was focused on photographing the demonstrations that evening, said he ignored the man, and picked up his pace so he was walking with a different part of the crowd for the next several blocks.</p><p data-block-key=\"92xvf\">After marching through the city, the protesters congregated on a highway overpass, and the crowd thinned out, Reintz said. The same man who had heckled Reinitz earlier in the evening approached him again.</p><p data-block-key=\"rqrnh\">The man shouted at the reporter again, telling him to leave more aggressively than before.</p><p data-block-key=\"3t9lk\">A cellphone video of the interaction shared on social media showed the man took a swing at Reinitz, according to the reporter.</p><p data-block-key=\"jtj7g\">Reinitz said he backed up to try to de-escalate the situation and to focus on doing his job, and other protesters stood up for him. One marcher got in front of Reinitz to defend the journalist, and the man punched him in the face, Reinitz said.</p><p data-block-key=\"w49bd\">Reinitz didn’t want the protester to get hit again, so tried to signal to him that he was OK. Mixed in the crowd, he felt someone come up near his other side and try to knock his camera from his right hand. Because the strap was tethered to his hand, the camera didn’t fall to the ground. When Reinitz looked to see who had tried to hit his camera, he saw a young man walking away.</p><p data-block-key=\"o7e3r\">Then, as Reinitz turned back to the man who had originally become aggressive toward him, a third person came up behind him and punched him in the back of the head.</p><p data-block-key=\"1fk2g\">A <a href=\"https://youtu.be/-bBl1kMiL3M?t=497\">cellphone video</a> that captured the incident shows a person come up behind Reinitz and strike him. Reinitz stayed on his feet, but staggered slightly, raising his hand up to the back of his head as he moved away and leaned against a concrete barrier.</p><p data-block-key=\"7yuoj\"><a href=\"https://wcfcourier.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/watch-now-two-charged-in-attack-on-courier-reporter-during-demonstrations/article_89c21198-91a6-507a-a784-e660353a970c.html#tracking-source=home-trending\">The Courier reported</a> that a 16-year-old, who wasn’t identified, struck Reinitz. The youth was arrested on June 4 and charged for disorderly conduct and rioting, according to the Courier.</p><p data-block-key=\"uunj4\">Reinitz said didn’t seek medical attention for his injury. He realized as he left the protest later that night that he was bleeding slightly behind his ear from the blow.</p><p data-block-key=\"e6mx4\">“My main concern was like, how do I go about doing my job without getting hit again?” he said. “I guess part of it's this other concern where you're trying to not be the news and I was just trying to think about, OK, how do I get basically back in the game.”</p><p data-block-key=\"k02t3\">After he was hit, Reinitz continued to follow the protesters through the city. Police used tear gas to try to disperse the demonstrators, he said. When Reinitz was walking through clouds of tear gas near a park, a fourth person who had been involved with the altercation on the overpass came up and shoved him, before running off, he said.</p><p data-block-key=\"4te1y\">Details about the 16-year-old’s case were not available because the individual is a juvenile, according to Reinitz. The Black Hawk County Attorney’s office didn’t respond to a request for information on the status of the case.</p><p data-block-key=\"2ntvz\">Protests against police violence and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have been held across the United States since the end of May, following the deaths of Floyd, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky, and others by police.</p><p data-block-key=\"9jwia\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists being assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas, or having their equipment damaged while covering these protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": "https://media.pressfreedomtracker.us/media/images/Screen_Shot_2020-10-22_at_1.10.37.2e16d0ba.fill-1330x880.png",
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"4ih6w\">While livestreaming a protest in Waterloo, Iowa, Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier staff writer Jeff Reinitz was harassed and assaulted multiple times.</p>",
"arresting_authority": null,
"arrest_status": null,
"release_date": null,
"detention_date": null,
"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
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"actor": null,
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"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
"did_authorities_ask_about_work": null,
"assailant": "private individual",
"was_journalist_targeted": "yes",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
"subpoena_type": null,
"name_of_business": null,
"third_party_business": null,
"legal_order_venue": null,
"status_of_prior_restraint": null,
"mistakenly_released_materials": false,
"links": [],
"equipment_seized": [],
"equipment_broken": [],
"state": {
"name": "Iowa",
"abbreviation": "IA"
},
"updates": [
"(2020-10-19 16:44:00+00:00) Man sentenced for attacking reporter at Iowa protest"
],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Jeff Reinitz (Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier)"
],
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"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "Tampa Bay Times reporter detained during St. Petersburg protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/tampa-bay-times-reporter-detained-during-st-petersburg-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-22T15:32:16.964012Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:51:20.346641Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:51:20.266725Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "St. Petersburg",
"longitude": -82.67927,
"latitude": 27.77086,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"4fh3h\">Tampa Bay Times reporter Jay Cridlin was detained on June 2, 2020, while covering a protest in St. Petersburg, Florida.</p><p data-block-key=\"oku9s\">Protesters had gathered in St. Petersburg and in cities across the U.S. to denounce police brutality following the death of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25.</p><p data-block-key=\"r2x8e\">The Times <a href=\"https://www.tampabay.com/news/tampa/2020/06/03/two-reporters-for-times-placed-in-zip-ties-while-covering-protests/\">reported</a> that Cridlin was covering demonstrations outside police headquarters on First Avenue North when protesters were ordered to disperse. St. Petersburg police officers and Pinellas County sheriff’s deputies then advanced on the crowd to make arrests. Cridlin was detained by a sheriff’s deputy, who placed his hands in zip ties.</p><p data-block-key=\"ey43v\">A St. Petersburg police spokesperson told the Times that Chief Anthony Holloway recognized Cridlin and had a deputy free him right away.</p><p data-block-key=\"9hzsq\">Cridlin told the Times that Holloway, Mayor Rick Kriseman and Sheriff Bob Gualtieri reached out to apologize the following day. Gualtieri also said he was looking into the incident.</p><p data-block-key=\"f0rni\">“You guys have a role. This has nothing to do with the media,” Gualtieri said. “It was clearly accidental, and we just need to avoid it.”</p><p data-block-key=\"3zgrd\">In a statement the following day, Times Executive Editor Mark Katches objected to the detentions of Cridlin and a second Times journalist, Divya Kumar, in Tampa on June 3. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/tampa-bay-times-journalist-knocked-ground-detained-while-covering-florida-protests/\">documented Kumar’s arrest here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"7l9xb\">“Journalists need to be able to do our jobs and report the news without being harassed, detained, intimidated or harmed by law enforcement,” Katches said.</p><p data-block-key=\"s5175\">The Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\"> these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
"teaser_image": null,
"primary_video": null,
"image_caption": "",
"arresting_authority": "St. Petersburg Police Department",
"arrest_status": "detained and released without being processed",
"release_date": null,
"detention_date": null,
"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
"case_number": null,
"case_type": null,
"status_of_seized_equipment": null,
"is_search_warrant_obtained": false,
"actor": null,
"border_point": null,
"target_us_citizenship_status": null,
"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
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"assailant": null,
"was_journalist_targeted": null,
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
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"mistakenly_released_materials": false,
"links": [],
"equipment_seized": [],
"equipment_broken": [],
"state": {
"name": "Florida",
"abbreviation": "FL"
},
"updates": [],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Jay Cridlin (Tampa Bay Times)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
"type_of_denial": []
},
{
"title": "San Antonio Express-News reporter hit by projectiles while covering protests",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/san-antonio-express-news-reporter-hit-by-projectiles-while-covering-protests/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-15T20:14:59.630907Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-17T15:46:16.041513Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-17T15:46:15.952092Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "San Antonio",
"longitude": -98.49363,
"latitude": 29.42412,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"u7jie\">San Antonio Express-News reporter Mark Dunphy was hit by a crowd-control munition fired by law enforcement officers who were attempting to disperse protesters in downtown San Antonio, Texas, on the evening of June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"gsiiv\">Protesters had gathered in San Antonio and in cities across the U.S. to denounce the police killing of George Floyd, a Black man who died while being arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 25.</p><p data-block-key=\"x7ubt\">In San Antonio, demonstrators were marching towards the Alamo, a symbolic site where in 1836 a vastly outnumbered group of Texan settlers were besieged in the mission by 1,500 Mexican troops.</p><p data-block-key=\"voai7\">Dunphy and Spectrum News reporter Lena Blietz were on the scene as protesters gathered by a line of police officers wearing riot gear in front of Alamo Plaza, a commercial center next to the historic mission.</p><p data-block-key=\"1frww\">Blietz told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker that the protest was “super peaceful.” As some protesters took a knee and one addressed the crowd near the police line, Blietz said she thought she was about to witness officers and protesters embracing — something that had happened in Fort Worth, Texas, the previous night.</p><p data-block-key=\"48dae\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/LenaBlietz/status/1268034667770511362\">A video captured by Blietz</a> showed a man standing in front of riot police telling protesters, “put your hands up — let everybody know we’re not here for violence!”</p><p data-block-key=\"to8oc\">As he said that, there is a commotion alongside several bangs and the sound of crowd-control munitions being fired as people scramble to flee.</p><p data-block-key=\"mo7uw\">Dunphy, who was standing near Blietz when police moved to disperse protesters, was hit with a crowd-control munition.</p><p data-block-key=\"oapof\">“Caught one of them to the leg. Free Yin Yang tattoo, I suppose,”<a href=\"https://twitter.com/m_b_dunphy/status/1268029073558851585\"> Dunphy wrote on Twitter</a> alongside photos of a hand holding a wooden projectile and a dark welt on the back of his thigh.</p><p data-block-key=\"r6up6\">Blietz was also struck in the leg with a crowd-control munition. The Tracker has documented that case <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/spectrum-news-reporter-hit-by-police-projectile-amid-san-antonio-protest/\">here</a>.</p><p data-block-key=\"mkik7\">In another tweet, Dunphy wrote that he saw a plastic bottle thrown at police shortly before officers began firing wooden rounds and using tear gas. In a video shared by Dunphy that night, dots from laser pointers aimed at police officers can be seen. Blietz can be seen standing directly in front of police, filming a protester’s address to the crowd.</p><p data-block-key=\"xgv58\">In a photo shared by Dunphy the day after he was hit, the welt caused by the wooden round had grown in size, turning purple and red.</p><p data-block-key=\"xrxe0\">After the incident, one of Dunphy’s colleagues at the Express-News tweeted that Dunphy had been hit by a wooden bullet fired by police and tagged San Antonio mayor Ron Nirenberg,<a href=\"https://twitter.com/JFreports/status/1268032683009024000\"> asking “are you okay with this?”</a></p><p data-block-key=\"kybb1\">“No, I’m not,” Nirenberg responded, “I am asking for more information on these projectiles.</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">No, I'm not. <br><br>I am asking for more information on these projectiles. <a href=\"https://t.co/TCEEexVEXZ\">https://t.co/TCEEexVEXZ</a></p>— Mayor Ron | Get vax’d! 💪 (@Ron_Nirenberg) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Ron_Nirenberg/status/1268044774222843904?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"t6tqt\">Dunphy and the Express-News didn’t respond to requests for comment. Spokespeople for the San Antonio mayor’s office also didn’t respond to the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"id0b2\">“It is my understanding that two local journalists were hit during the crowd dispersal,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said <a href=\"https://www.sanantonio.gov/SAPD/Press-Releases/ArtMID/7184/ArticleID/19022/Statement-from-San-Antonio-Police-Chief\">in a June 3 statement</a>. “Although this was unfortunate, this was certainly not the police department’s intent. During crowd control dispersal action officers cannot readily distinguish between peaceful protesters, media and agitators once the situation has reached a boiling point.”</p><p data-block-key=\"g0ftg\">McManus added that the police department was and would continue offering journalists the opportunity to cover protests from a “safe zone” behind the line of officers. The police chief advised journalists who cover protests from within crowds to leave if the situation becomes volatile.</p><p data-block-key=\"imah9\">A public information officer for the San Antonio Police Department said they had no additional statement.</p><p data-block-key=\"071o4\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas or who had their equipment damaged in the course of reporting. Find all incidents related to Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality protests <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
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"image_caption": "",
"arresting_authority": null,
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"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
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"actor": null,
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"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
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"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "unknown",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
"subpoena_type": null,
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"state": {
"name": "Texas",
"abbreviation": "TX"
},
"updates": [],
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"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest",
"shot / shot at"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Mark Dunphy (San Antonio Express-News)"
],
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},
{
"title": "Detroit Free Press reporter detained, pushed to ground while covering a protest for story on police tactics",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/detroit-free-press-reporter-detained-pushed-ground-while-covering-protest-story-police-tactics/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-15T19:38:35.861177Z",
"last_published_at": "2021-11-19T16:36:12.299065Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2021-11-19T16:36:12.236157Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Detroit",
"longitude": -83.04575,
"latitude": 42.33143,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p>Detroit Free Press reporter Darcie Moran had her hands zip-tied and was flung to the ground by Detroit police while reporting on protests in the city on June 2, 2020, the reporter told the Committee to Protect Journalists.</p><p>Moran said that she was working on a story about police tactics and observed police blocking a line of protesters on Gratiot Avenue and an armored vehicle coming up from behind the protesters.</p><p>Moran said she was standing on a grassy area with other reporters near the Family Dollar store at 10950 Gratiot Avenue while the protesters were in the streets. She stepped slightly away from the group to get a better glimpse of the protesters.</p><p>“All of a sudden there was a rush to my right and I can’t say exactly what happened because it was a little bit of a blur,” she said, stating that protesters might have run up to the curb between the grassy area and the street.</p><p>“What I do know is that police started coming up from the side and not from the spots that we had been facing,” she said. “I turned and as I go to lift up my press badge that’s hanging on my chest, I am pushed to the ground and they start putting me in zip ties,” she said.</p><p>Moran said she had a respirator on at the time and so wasn’t sure if police could hear her yell, “I’m media, I’m media!” Moran said her colleagues behind her were yelling that she was a member of the media and for police to release her once she was on the ground.</p><p>Moran’s colleagues <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6o4DcpFLwuA&app=desktop&ab_channel=DetroitFreePress\">posted a video of the incident online</a>. “You can see in the video that he allows me to put my phone in my back pocket,” Moran said.</p><p>Another officer walked up and instructed his colleague to release Moran, the journalist said. Moran said that until she saw the video, she didn’t realize that her second hand was in the process of being zip-tied when the police officer intervened.</p><p>“What’s interesting about this is they had released media passes for these events two nights prior,” Moran said. “[I] had a giant one printed out and used duck tape to strap it on my back, so it was a very large sign that a number of people pointed out would have been visible as I was on the ground being zip-tied,” she told CPJ, a founding partner of the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.</p><p>Moran said that the officer who ended the confrontation helped her up from the ground, apologized and then found her later to apologize again. Moran said she had a scratch and some back and ankle pain the next day.</p><p>Detroit police did not respond to CPJ’s emailed request for comment.</p></div>",
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"state": {
"name": "Michigan",
"abbreviation": "MI"
},
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge",
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Darcie Moran (Detroit Free Press)"
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},
{
"title": "Videographer hit by police projectiles while filming Seattle protest",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/videographer-hit-police-projectiles-while-filming-seattle-protest/",
"first_published_at": "2020-10-13T20:01:53.384695Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:58.218470Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:58.135943Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Seattle",
"longitude": -122.33207,
"latitude": 47.60621,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"jfb6j\">Independent videographer Alyse Gallagher said she was hit in the chest with a crowd-control projectile and targeted with pepper balls by police as she recorded a confrontation between law enforcement and protesters in Seattle on June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"9nyrl\">The city was in its fourth night of large protests against police violence sparked by the May 25 police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, in Minneapolis. Gallagher, who posts footage of demonstrations on <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRamEAEfFNEs4fKgp5Z01Jg/videos\">her YouTube channel, AlyseUnleashed,</a> was filming the standoff at the intersection of Pine Street and 11th Avenue in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood.</p><p data-block-key=\"2toq2\">Police fired tear gas after some people in the crowd threw objects at officers. Protesters retreated about half a block north, as did Gallagher, who stopped in a parking lot where she tried to clear her eyes of tear gas.</p><p data-block-key=\"k2w1p\">She said she intentionally stayed away from the protesters so she wouldn’t be seen as a potential target by law enforcement. Gallagher was carrying and using a camera but said she wasn’t wearing visible press identification and was “going lower profile” that night.</p><p data-block-key=\"wbj8n\">Unable to see and in pain from the tear gas, she put her camera down and reached for her bag to get a bottle of water to flush her eyes.</p><p data-block-key=\"ffie8\">“That’s when I realized I had...flashlights trained on me and I’m like: They think I’m grabbing something,” she told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"gxtyk\">She said police fired pepper balls at her. In the video she filmed that night, a white puff consistent with a pepper ball impact can be seen.</p><p data-block-key=\"6boc1\">“I’m not getting anything! I need water!” she shouted<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWAPTMi8LuE\"> in the video</a>. “I’m fucking press!”</p><p data-block-key=\"w2m1v\">Gallagher can later be heard waving off a protester offering help, saying she doesn’t want to be “too associated because they keep shooting shit at me.”</p><p data-block-key=\"2yeml\">Less than two minutes later and still having trouble seeing, Gallagher was trying to untangle herself from her camera gear’s cables when she got hit in the chest by what she believes was a 40 millimeter crowd-control round containing a chemical irritant. “I just remember it hitting me in the chest and then like reeling backwards and then just screaming because I hit the ground hard enough that I recoiled. Like I could feel my chest bounce back.”</p><p data-block-key=\"d9fd1\">She said she doesn’t believe police targeted her for being a journalist, but is upset police used crowd-control weapons on her since she had clearly separated herself from the protesters.</p><p data-block-key=\"l34xs\">“That’s the one thing that kind of bothers me: You're going to shoot the one person who’s not behind the wall of shields? Where if you’re up to anything, that’s where you’re going to be?” she said. “I was by myself in that parking lot at that point.”</p><p data-block-key=\"colxf\">The Seattle Police Department didn’t respond to a request for comment about the incident.</p><p data-block-key=\"tess2\">Protests following the deaths of Floyd in Minneapolis, Breonna Taylor in Louisville and against police brutality have continued in many U.S. cities for months. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists being assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas, or having their equipment damaged while covering these protests across the country. <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\"> Find these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
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"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "no",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
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"state": {
"name": "Washington",
"abbreviation": "WA"
},
"updates": [],
"case_statuses": [],
"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"chemical irritant",
"protest",
"shot / shot at"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Alyse Gallagher (Freelance)"
],
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},
{
"title": "Colorado Springs TV reporter hit with pepper spray",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/colorado-springs-tv-reporter-hit-pepper-spray/",
"first_published_at": "2020-08-14T16:02:55.425160Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:34.301931Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:34.219624Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Colorado Springs",
"longitude": -104.82136,
"latitude": 38.83388,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"6naf5\">Spencer Wilson, a reporter for local CBS affiliate KKTV 11, was pepper sprayed by police while covering a protest in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on June 2, 2020.</p><p data-block-key=\"k9158\">The protests were held in response to a video showing a white police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25. Floyd was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Protests against police brutality and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have been held across the United States since the end of May.</p><p data-block-key=\"kq8zm\">Wilson had been covering the protest in front of the Colorado Springs police headquarters with a KKTV photographer, Jon Modic, all day, and broadcast much of the demonstrations on <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?v=329636514690916&ref=watch_permalink\">Facebook Live</a>. The pair were reporting from a barricade in front of the police headquarters, where about 75 people were protesting and about 40 police officers were standing on the other side, Wilson told the Committee to Protect Journalists.</p><p data-block-key=\"et7e2\">At around 10:30 p.m., an announcement came over a loudspeaker informing the crowd that the protest was no longer peaceful, and that protesters needed to leave. Wilson heard the same announcement while covering protests the previous night, June 1. On both nights, the announcement angered the crowd, Wilson said, and he saw bottles being thrown at police officers.</p><p data-block-key=\"i27ot\">At this point, Wilson was standing with Shawn Shanle, a photographer for FOX 21, and he began moving back as officers with riot shields moved toward the crowd. Wilson estimated no more than two minutes passed between the dispersal order and the police moving in on the crowd. Then, fireworks exploded and police shouted, “That was not us!” Officers then began pepper spraying the crowd.</p><p data-block-key=\"cl5la\">“I’m walking away from the police. I turn around to start walking backwards, like I’m in a marching band, while I’m holding up my camera on my shoulder,” Wilson said. “A police officer, who is on the very edge of the line, just randomly sprays pepper spray as if it was silly string.”</p><p data-block-key=\"vmpaf\">Wilson said the officer looked directly at him when he sprayed from about 10 yards away. “It was directly aimed at me and that photographer and it wafted over to us and went directly into us.”</p><p data-block-key=\"kt6r5\">Wilson said he was clearly identifiable as a member of the media. He had a large camera on his shoulder, was dressed in a suit and tie, and was wearing a media I.D. on a lanyard.</p><p data-block-key=\"bbcut\">Wilson also had visited the police station earlier in the day to ask where journalists should report from, and where they should move to in the event of a dispersal. When told to disperse, Wilson walked in the direction the police had told him to go earlier in the day.</p><p data-block-key=\"p5jq8\">After he was sprayed, Wilson turned the camera at the police, repeated that he was media, and asked the officer why he sprayed. Wilson says the officer was silent, and continued chasing after protesters who were walking away. Wilson didn’t get the name of the officer, and said he didn’t know whether he had been targeted as a member of the press.</p><p data-block-key=\"uagom\">After being sprayed, Wilson said he was separately hit with tear gas deployed by police. A police officer led Wilson — coughing and with eyes stinging from the chemicals — away from the street. He used a water bottle given to him by a protester to wash out his eyes and finished reporting at around midnight.</p><p data-block-key=\"jhoyq\">A spokesperson for the Colorado Springs Police Department declined to comment on the incident, but said the department worked with the media to address safety concerns. The department also <a href=\"https://twitter.com/CSPDPIO/status/1268277781609148416\">said</a> on Twitter that demonstrators are ordered to disperse only when protests turn violent.</p><p data-block-key=\"qhh6y\">In a message sent to members of the media on June 3, the Colorado Springs Police Department said, “Please know that you are never targeted because you are press. When officers are working to safely disperse a crowd, they cannot differentiate media in the crowd (as many protestors also have cameras), and are working to disperse everyone present.” The message goes on to ask reporters to wear clothing that clearly identifies them as press, and that journalists have their credentials on them at all times.</p><p data-block-key=\"38xrx\">The next day, Wilson’s boss bought goggles and reflective vests for journalists to wear for future assignments, so police could more easily identify them. Wilson said he went back to the Colorado Springs police headquarters and told officers about the vests.</p><p data-block-key=\"gt132\">“The officers I spoke with laughed and said, ‘It’s not going to help.’ I was taken aback.”</p><p data-block-key=\"q5tpb\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists being assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd-control ammunition or tear gas, or having their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
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"arresting_authority": null,
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"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
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"status_of_seized_equipment": null,
"is_search_warrant_obtained": false,
"actor": null,
"border_point": null,
"target_us_citizenship_status": null,
"denial_of_entry": false,
"stopped_previously": false,
"did_authorities_ask_for_device_access": null,
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"assailant": "law enforcement",
"was_journalist_targeted": "unknown",
"charged_under_espionage_act": false,
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"mistakenly_released_materials": false,
"links": [],
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"state": {
"name": "Colorado",
"abbreviation": "CO"
},
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"workers_whose_communications_were_obtained": [],
"target_nationality": [],
"targeted_institutions": [],
"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"chemical irritant",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Assault"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Spencer Wilson (KKTV)"
],
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},
{
"title": "Freelance journalist detained until colleague vouches for her to Los Angeles police",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/freelance-journalist-detained-until-colleague-vouches-her-los-angeles-police/",
"first_published_at": "2020-08-05T16:14:05.872520Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:14.368071Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:50:14.276908Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "Los Angeles",
"longitude": -118.24368,
"latitude": 34.05223,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"h5sbm\">Samanta Helou-Hernandez, a freelance multimedia journalist, was detained by Los Angeles police on June 2, 2020 while covering a protest near the mayor’s residence.</p><p data-block-key=\"ubjc6\">The protest was part of a wave of Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality demonstrations across the country sparked by the release of a video showing a white Minneapolis police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest. Floyd was later pronounced dead in a hospital.</p><p data-block-key=\"lgq1u\">The officer has been charged with second-degree murder. Three other officers who were present face felony charges.</p><p data-block-key=\"lq0z9\">The protest in central Los Angeles began at the Getty House, the mayor’s residence, before the city-wide curfew at 6:30 p.m., Helou-Hernandez told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. Some protesters wanted to continue demonstrating past curfew and Helou-Hernandez stayed to document them. Around 7:30 p.m., about 100 protesters marched through Hancock Park before turning onto Wilshire Boulevard where they were met by police in riot gear.</p><p data-block-key=\"6470g\">Helou-Hernandez followed the group of protesters onto a side street. Someone yelled, “they’re shooting,” and Helou-Hernandez said she followed a smaller contingent of around a dozen people onto another side street, where they were cornered by officers with the Los Angeles Police Department. Helou-Hernandez was cuffed with zip ties. When she told the police that she was press, they moved her aside. She explained that she didn’t have press credentials because she was a freelancer and offered to show LAPD her clips and website on her phone.</p><p data-block-key=\"6i41y\">According to Helou-Hernandez, an officer said something to the effect of, “If you’re press, why did you run away from us? You should have run toward us” if you thought there was shooting. At this point, Helou-Hernandez and protesters were brought to a second location to join a larger group of about 20-30 handcuffed protesters. The officers called their names and directed them to form lines. The group was sent to a third location on 8th and Crenshaw where buses would take them to the precinct.</p><p data-block-key=\"t15wf\">Lexis-Olivier Ray, a journalist for L.A. Taco, was at 8th and Crenshaw documenting arrests. Ray was already in touch with a police supervisor because he and an L.A. Taco colleague had been barred from crossing the police line. Ray heard Helou-Hernandez calling his name.</p><p data-block-key=\"9ympi\">“I grabbed the attention of the supervisor who I had been talking to already ... and I bring his attention to the fact that my friend and fellow journalist Sami is in custody,” Ray said. He also showed the LAPD her website and clips.</p><p data-block-key=\"txkmb\">At 9:36 p.m. Ray <a href=\"https://twitter.com/ShotOn35mm/status/1268038752628174848\">tweeted</a> a video of Helou-Hernandez in zip ties with the caption, “My friend and fellow journalist<a href=\"https://twitter.com/Samanta_Helou\"> @Samanta_Helou</a> is currently in custody.<a href=\"https://twitter.com/LAPDHQ\"> @LAPDHQ</a> is trying to verify her identity. We've shown them her work for<a href=\"https://twitter.com/KCET\"> @kcet</a><a href=\"https://twitter.com/Curbed\"> @curbed</a><a href=\"https://twitter.com/LAist\"> @laist</a><a href=\"https://twitter.com/LATACO\"> @lataco</a>.”</p></div>\n<div class=\"block-tweet\"><div class=\"tweet-embed\">\n <div>\n <blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"><p lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\">My friend and fellow journalist <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Samanta_Helou?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@Samanta_Helou</a> is currently in custody. <a href=\"https://twitter.com/LAPDHQ?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@LAPDHQ</a> is trying to verify her identity. We've shown them her work for <a href=\"https://twitter.com/KCET?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@kcet</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Curbed?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@curbed</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/LAist?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@laist</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/LATACO?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">@lataco</a>. <a href=\"https://t.co/ttLPiynnGU\">pic.twitter.com/ttLPiynnGU</a></p>— Lexis-Olivier Ray (@ShotOn35mm) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/ShotOn35mm/status/1268038752628174848?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">June 3, 2020</a></blockquote>\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\n\n</div>\n\n</div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"8fu2s\">Ray was told that the media relations officer would make a decision regarding whether Helou-Hernandez would be taken into custody. After 20-30 minutes, the media relations officer arrived and Helou-Hernandez was released.</p><p data-block-key=\"0za7w\">Helou-Hernandez was not given a certificate of release, but estimates that she was in custody for 90 minutes. At 10:02 p.m. she <a href=\"https://twitter.com/Samanta_Helou/status/1268045354701750272\">tweeted</a> that she had been released. The LAPD did not respond to a request for comment.</p><p data-block-key=\"kc0ur\">“Had I not seen a colleague I would have ultimately been taken on the bus downtown,” Helou-Hernandez told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"gzee1\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering Black Lives Matter protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
"introduction": "",
"teaser": "",
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"arresting_authority": "Los Angeles Police Department",
"arrest_status": "detained and released without being processed",
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"unnecessary_use_of_force": false,
"case_number": null,
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"links": [],
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"state": {
"name": "California",
"abbreviation": "CA"
},
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
],
"politicians_or_public_figures_involved": [],
"authors": [],
"categories": [
"Arrest/Criminal Charge"
],
"targeted_journalists": [
"Samanta Helou-Hernandez (Freelance)"
],
"subpoena_statuses": [],
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},
{
"title": "KQED journalist briefly detained, another journalist arrested, covering sit-in against San Francisco curfew",
"url": "https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/kqed-journalist-briefly-detained-another-journalist-arrested-covering-sit-against-san-francisco-curfew/",
"first_published_at": "2020-07-05T21:59:24.334354Z",
"last_published_at": "2024-06-13T17:49:54.148330Z",
"latest_revision_created_at": "2024-06-13T17:49:54.058777Z",
"date": "2020-06-02",
"exact_date_unknown": false,
"city": "San Francisco",
"longitude": -122.41942,
"latitude": 37.77493,
"body": "<div class=\"block-rich_text\"><p data-block-key=\"95lg2\">Police detained Sheraz Sadiq, a producer for local NPR and PBS affiliate KQED, while covering a protest against a citywide curfew in San Francisco, California, on June 2, 2020, he told the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"2vnm0\">The curfew was imposed as the city struggled to manage protests in response to a video showing a white police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25. Floyd was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Protests against police brutality and in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have been held across the United States since the end of May.</p><p data-block-key=\"1rpx6\">After another <a href=\"https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Together-our-voices-are-stronger-Hundreds-15312639.php\">day of protests</a> against police violence, nearly 20 protesters led by the Democratic Socialists of America arrived at City Hall to protest the curfew, DSA member Hope Williams told the Tracker. After recruiting more participants at City Hall, the group <a href=\"https://www.kqed.org/news/11822543/civil-liberties-advocates-raise-concerns-about-curfews-imposed-across-bay-area\">marched</a> to the Hall of Justice to perform a peaceful sit-in after the 8 p.m. curfew.</p><p data-block-key=\"ruy51\">San Francisco police followed the march and formed a cordon around the protesters after they arrived at the Hall of Justice, Sadiq told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"eufll\">Not wanting to be confused for a protester, Sadiq showed officers his credentials and told them he was working for KQED, he said.</p><p data-block-key=\"duob6\">Around 9:30, police warned over a megaphone that the protesters were in violation of curfew and ordered them to disperse, Sadiq said. But protesters, ignoring the warnings, responded with chants like “I don’t see no riot here. Why are you in riot gear?”</p><p data-block-key=\"qs1p1\">Sadiq said he tried to leave the cordoned area, but an officer blocked his exit. When he identified himself as a journalist, the officer called over a sergeant.</p><p data-block-key=\"ffpnn\">The sergeant said Sadiq was in a “sanitized zone” and could not leave, according to Sadiq. When Sadiq told the sergeant he was a journalist, the sergeant said they would “sort it out later,” according to Sadiq.</p><p data-block-key=\"b4kjf\">Rebuffed on one side, Sadiq said he tried to leave on the other side of the cordon. But there, too, he was turned back. Sadiq was stuck inside the cordon with the sit-in, now about 30 people strong.</p><p data-block-key=\"ltfuz\">In a <a href=\"https://twitter.com/SherazSadiq1/status/1268051221224419328\">video</a> tweeted by Sadiq just before 10:30, police can be seen arresting the protesters one by one. Protesters cheer in support each time it is the next protester’s turn to stand, put their hands behind their back and walk away in the custody of the San Francisco Police Department.</p><p data-block-key=\"lk9ge\">The city’s <a href=\"https://sfmayor.org/article/mayor-london-breed-and-public-safety-officials-announce-curfew-san-francisco-begin-tonight-8#:~:text=Breed%2C%20in%20consultation%20with%20the,Monday%2C%20June%201%2C%202020.\">curfew order</a> excluded “authorized representatives of any news service, newspaper, radio or television station or network, or other media organization.”</p><p data-block-key=\"cjmze\">But freelance journalist Sakura Sato, who was also inside the cordon, <a href=\"https://pressfreedomtracker.us/all-incidents/journalists-detained-one-arrested-covering-protest-against-san-francisco-curfew/\">was arrested</a> with the protesters despite identifying as a journalist, she told the Tracker. Sato, who recently decided to pursue journalism, had not yet acquired press credentials.</p><p data-block-key=\"gcm36\">Sadiq, who had a press ID from KQED, was treated differently. With all the protesters and Sato under arrest, only Sadiq remained inside the police cordon. Two officers approached him.</p><p data-block-key=\"on9k2\">“They looked a little bit confused. They had to check with each other. Like, should we get him?” Sadiq explained. “Then I stepped back and they said, ‘Sir, you are going to have to come with us.’”</p><p data-block-key=\"gpvtn\">Sadiq asked why, and the officers said that he was not under arrest but detained until they could check his credentials. The officers asked if Sadiq would resist. He said no, but voiced his disagreement about what was happening, he told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"fo9cw\">“Joe, I’m being arrested!” Sadiq yelled out to his KQED colleague Joe Fitzgerald Rodriguez, who was reporting across the street. Fitzgerald Rodriguez remained outside the cordon but was flanked by officers.</p><p data-block-key=\"w4ryl\">“What did I tell you?” one of the officers responded, according to Sadiq. “You’re not being arrested. You’re just being detained.”</p><p data-block-key=\"2i1f4\">The officers took Sadiq to a staging area, where he was asked to provide his driver’s license. Sadiq removed the face mask he was wearing to help confirm his identity, he said.</p><p data-block-key=\"7jrbi\">Sadiq said he asked why he was being detained, and the officers responded that he disobeyed the dispersal order. When Sadiq said he was a working journalist exempt from the curfew order, the police said that protesters had falsely been claiming to be journalists in an attempt to evade arrest.</p><p data-block-key=\"81skb\">Sadiq said he was released after about 15 minutes.</p><p data-block-key=\"m6uvi\">Fitzgerald Rodriguez told the Tracker that he shouted across the street trying to vouch for his detained colleague. Eventually an officer, who he believes was a sergeant, crossed the street to talk to him before returning to Sadiq.</p><p data-block-key=\"1r8ov\">Sato and the protesters were released with a citation on charges of violating curfew and resisting, delaying or obstructing a public officer or peace officer, Sato and Williams, the DSA member, told the Tracker.</p><p data-block-key=\"73z45\">Rachel Marshall, a spokesperson for San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, said the cases were discharged. She said Boudin “deeply values the First Amendment—including its protection of the press,” adding that Boudin supports the protests against police brutality and will not prosecute peaceful activity.</p><p data-block-key=\"4h259\">A SFPD spokesperson said the department was reviewing body camera footage but did not respond to specific questions about Sato's arrest and Sadiq's detention by press time.</p><p data-block-key=\"dr1dh\">Sadiq said the police treated him politely but the incident left him questioning why his detention was necessary at all.</p><p data-block-key=\"aa87t\">“It’s not like this was a melee, a chaotic scene that was unfolding, and in the scrum of the confusion, they swept up everybody,” Sadiq explained. “This was a very orderly, very well-organized demonstration.”</p><p data-block-key=\"zwew6\">Yet once someone is inside the police cordon, Sadiq said, they seemed to be treated “almost like an enemy combatant” that the police must “screen and verify and go through their protocols, including detention and possibly arrest.”</p><p data-block-key=\"tdc9c\">Sadiq, who is of South Asian heritage, said he did not see any evidence of racial prejudice during his detention. But he worried throughout that his name would end up on a list that could cause trouble in the future.</p><p data-block-key=\"ay5an\">“As a person of color, especially with the protests that are engulfing the nation around racial inequity, this is a conversation or a monologue sometimes people of color have, especially when being subject to interactions with law enforcement,” Sadiq said.</p><p data-block-key=\"75cx6\">The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is documenting several hundred incidents of journalists assaulted, arrested, struck by crowd control ammunition or tear gas or had their equipment damaged while covering protests across the country. Find <a href=\"/blog/blm-and-unprecedented-aggressions-against-media/\">these incidents here</a>.</p></div>",
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"teaser_image": "https://media.pressfreedomtracker.us/media/images/Sadiq_CreditFitzgerald_Rodriguez_.2e16d0ba.fill-1330x880.jpg",
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"image_caption": "<p data-block-key=\"1ycc7\">Protesters perform a sit-in at San Francisco’s Hall of Justice on June 2, 2020, as KQED’s Sheraz Sadiq, standing right, in white sweater, documents the scene. The protesters were arrested and Sadiq was detained.</p>",
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"state": {
"name": "California",
"abbreviation": "CA"
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"tags": [
"Black Lives Matter",
"protest"
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"categories": [
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]