Incident details
- Updated on
- Date of incident
- July 17, 2025
- Arrest status
- Arrested and released
- Arresting authority
- Covington Police Department
- Charges
-
-
Obstruction: disorderly conduct
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
-
Obstruction: obstructing an emergency responder
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
-
Rioting
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
- July 23, 2025: Charges dropped
-
Rioting: failure to disperse
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
-
Rioting: unlawful assembly
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
- Sept. 24, 2025: Charges dropped
-
Traffic violation: obstructing a highway or public passage
- July 17, 2025: Charges pending
-
Obstruction: disorderly conduct
- Unnecessary use of force?
- No
Arrest/Criminal Charge

Anti-deportation protesters marched across the Roebling Suspension Bridge connecting Cincinnati, Ohio, and Covington, Kentucky, on July 17, 2025. Two CityBeat journalists were arrested by Covington police while covering the demonstration.
Charge dropped against Cincinnati journalist, but four remain from protest arrest
Investigative reporter Madeline Fening had a charge for unlawful assembly dropped against her on Sept. 24, 2025, but four others remain from her arrest in July while documenting a protest across the bridge connecting Cincinnati, Ohio, with Covington, Kentucky.
Her trial is scheduled for Jan. 13, 2026.
Fening and photo intern Lucas Griffith, both of the alternative newsweekly CityBeat, were covering a demonstration on the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge against the detention of Ayman Soliman, an Egyptian imam and former journalist. They were among the first individuals detained on the bridge by Covington police officers.
Both journalists were charged with misdemeanor failure to disperse, obstructing a highway, obstructing emergency responders, disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly, as well as rioting, a felony. Griffith was additionally charged with resisting arrest.
Kenton County prosecutor Rob Sanders told television station WLWT that he viewed Fening and Griffith’s journalism as irrelevant to the charges against them. Police Chief Brian Valenti alleged at a news conference that Fening did not have press credentials or an ID on her when she was taken into custody. Fening’s attorney later refuted this, saying that Fening was wearing CityBeat press credentials.
The felony rioting charges against both journalists were withdrawn at a July 23 hearing, but both cases were scheduled for jury trials on the remaining charges.
A coalition of press freedom organizations, including Freedom of the Press Foundation, of which the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker is a project, urged the Kenton County attorney to drop the cases. The organizations pointed out that jury trials of journalists are rare in the United States, and that prosecutors typically decline to bring charges against journalists arrested at protests.
“They recognize that protests and their aftermath are newsworthy and journalists reporting on them are just doing their constitutionally protected jobs,” the coalition wrote.
Charges against Griffith for unlawful assembly and resisting arrest were dismissed Sept. 17, LINK nky reported.
On Sept. 24, Fening’s unlawful assembly charge was dismissed in response to a motion by her attorneys, a Kenton County District Court clerk confirmed to the Tracker.
A county attorney told LINK nky that prosecutors had offered to drop the remaining charges if the journalists “stated on the record that the police had probable cause to arrest them on the bridge,” and waived the right to sue the officers for wrongful arrest. The journalists refused.
The journalists’ attorneys then asked the court to dismiss the cases or recuse the County Attorney’s Office from prosecuting them, arguing that the county attorney’s statements had intensified public criticism of the journalists, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
A judge in Kenton County District Court refused the request but gave the journalists an opportunity to postpone their trials. Fening agreed, and her trial was pushed to January. Griffith declined and was convicted at a jury trial on Oct. 2 for failure to disperse and fined $50. He was acquitted of the remaining charges.
Freedom of the Press Foundation condemned the conviction as unconstitutional, and said it showed “what a giant waste of taxpayer funds it is to prosecute journalists for doing their jobs.”
Two journalists for the Cincinnati alternative newsweekly CityBeat were arrested while documenting a protest across the bridge connecting the Ohio city with Covington, Kentucky, on July 17, 2025.
Demonstrators had gathered at a vigil in Cincinnati in support of Ayman Soliman, an Egyptian immigrant and imam who was detained by immigration authorities July 9, according to local NPR affiliate WVXU.
After the rally, dozens of protesters marched to the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge, crossing from Ohio to Kentucky. Within minutes, they were confronted by Covington police officers.
CityBeat investigative reporter Madeline Fening and photo intern Lucas Griffith were documenting the protest and were among the first individuals detained.
In footage captured by WVXU reporter Nick Swartsell, multiple Covington Police Department vehicles can be seen driving toward the advancing line of protesters. In body-camera footage released by the department, officers are heard ordering protesters to move off the roadway and onto the sidewalk multiple times over approximately 90 seconds.
In Swartsell’s footage, protesters are seen beginning to comply while officers advance toward the crowd. After one individual is seen being led away in handcuffs, an officer moves toward a woman in a white shirt who is filming on her cellphone, confirmed to be Fening. As an officer pulls her hands behind her back, she can be heard identifying herself as a reporter.
“Hey! She’s press! She’s press! She’s a reporter!” Swartsell calls out to the officer as he moves toward them. A second officer tells him to get back while Fening is seen being pulled backward toward the police vehicles with her arms behind her back.
Moments later, a man carrying multiple professional cameras — believed to be Griffith — is seen being led down the bridge with his arms held behind his back by a third officer.
Fening and Griffith were each charged with misdemeanor failure to disperse, obstructing a highway, obstructing emergency responders, disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly, as well as rioting, a felony. Griffith was additionally charged with resisting arrest.
Both journalists were arraigned July 18 and released on a $2,500 bond, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
NBC television affiliate WLWT reported that, when pressed by the station, Kenton County prosecutor Rob Sanders said he views Fening and Griffith’s role as journalists as irrelevant to the charges against them.
“We’ll be evaluating it like we would any other civilian, no matter what their line of work, or what profession they are engaged in, it doesn’t matter to us when we evaluate the evidence,” Sanders said.
During a news conference about the Covington Police Department’s response to the protest, Mayor Ron Washington described it as a “high-tension and chaotic environment.”
“We fully support the right to peacefully assemble. At the same time, we support our police officers who are often placed in incredible, difficult, fast-moving situations,” Washington said. “But any use of force must be lawful and measured.”
When asked during the conference about the arrests of the CityBeat journalists, Police Chief Brian Valenti alleged that Fening did not have press credentials or an ID on her when she was taken into custody. He added that he didn’t have any additional information on Griffith’s arrest.
CityBeat defended its journalists in a statement posted to the social platform X on July 18.
“CityBeat is fully supportive of its two staff members who were arrested in the course of their reporting on the Roebling Bridge protest,” the statement read. “Their commitment to journalistic integrity and professionalism is emblematic of the press freedoms the First Amendment is designed to protect, and we fully anticipate a complete vindication of their rights.”
Editor-in-chief Ashley Moor declined to comment when reached by the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, stating that she — along with Fening and Griffith — was advised not to speak further about the incident while the charges against them are pending.
During a July 23 hearing, the Enquirer reported, prosecutors withdrew the felony rioting charges against Fening and Griffith. The journalists, who are being represented by attorneys with the ACLU of Kentucky, are next due in court Aug. 14.
The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker catalogs press freedom violations in the United States. Email tips to [email protected].