Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

It’s the 122nd day that Rümeysa Öztürk is facing deportation by the United States government for writing an op-ed it didn’t like, and the 41st day that Mario Guevara has been imprisoned for covering a protest. Read on for more.

Paramount makes its capitulation official

President Donald Trump announced this week that he’d received CBS News parent Paramount Global’s $16 million payment to settle his frivolous lawsuit. Just days later, Trump’s FCC issued its long-delayed approval of Paramount’s merger with Skydance Media, confirming what we all knew — the payment has nothing to do with legal fees or liability risks and everything to do with greasing the wheels of a corrupt administration.

As Freedom of the Press Advocacy Director Seth Stern told Columbia Journalism Review, Paramount threw CBS journalists and the First Amendment under the bus, while making itself a punch line. “People can’t trust a news outlet that is bribing the same officials it’s supposed to hold accountable,” Stern said. But we’re not done fighting back against the enablers of this shakedown of a settlement — more on that soon. Read more in CJR.

Journalists starve in Gaza

Reuters, the Associated Press, BBC News and Agence France-Presse jointly expressed their alarm about the terrible plight of journalists in Gaza, and particularly the risk of starvation. As one journalist put it, “I used to chase the truth. Now I chase calories.”

“Journalists endure many deprivations and hardships in war zones. We are deeply alarmed that the threat of starvation is now one of them. We once again urge the Israeli authorities to allow journalists in and out of Gaza. It is essential that adequate food supplies reach the people there,” their statement said.

We told CJR that “no matter what else they do while in power, governments and presidents that supported these horrors, and tolerated the killing of journalists who reported on them, will be remembered first and foremost for their complicity.” We also published a profile of the journalist who wrote our article, in collaboration with the Intercept, about the dire situation facing journalists in Gaza, Neha Madhira. Read it here.

Radio silence on the reservation

Indian Time, a newspaper that served the Mohawk Nation at Akwesasne, built and informed a loyal audience of Indigenous readers for over 40 years.

But in late December 2024, the paper printed its last edition. Indian Time’s hand was forced by the same pressures affecting newspapers nationwide — namely, declining ad revenue. The paper could not afford to keep the ink flowing.

To better understand the demise of the newspaper and the impact on its community, Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) hosted a webinar with Indian Time editor Marjorie Skidders, former Indian Time reporter and FPF columnist Isaac White, and U.S. Press Freedom Tracker Senior Reporter Stephanie Sugars. Read more and watch the discussion here.

ICE must stop harassing journalists

According to a recent report by AMNY, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents making arrests in New York City immigration courts are harassing journalists by photographing journalists’ press credentials and falsely telling them that common areas of the courthouse are “restricted areas” from which they can’t report.

These intimidation tactics can chill constitutionally protected reporting. That’s why FPF and other press freedom groups wrote to the New York Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment and to the Federal Protective Service asking that they reaffirm that journalists have the right to report the news in New York courts without intimidation and that they develop policies to end ICE’s harassment of journalists.

Read the full letters here and here, and a follow-up report from AMNY here

Comey cellphone tracking points to privacy erosion

You may remember that the Secret Service and Department of Homeland Security launched an investigation into former FBI Director James Comey for posting a picture on Instagram during his beach vacation of seashells spelling out “8647.”

Since then, the government has apparently been exercising emergency authority to warrantlessly track his real-time cellphone location, despite the absence of anything resembling an emergency. This abuse of power is also a threat to journalists and sources. Read more here.

Kentucky prosecutors must drop charges

Two Cincinnati journalists were arrested in Kentucky for documenting a protest, despite zero evidence that they did anything wrong.

The absurd felony rioting charges against them were dropped this week after we, along with the Society of Professional Journalists and National Press Photographers Association, wrote a letter to prosecutors expressing our concerns. But the misdemeanor charges against them are still pending, and they shouldn’t be. Read the letter here.

What we’re reading

Hypocrisy on display (Press Club of Southwest Florida). If the Trump administration hates interview editing enough to shake down CBS for $16 million over its Kamala Harris interview, why is it prosecuting journalist Tim Burke for exposing far more significant edits by Tucker Carlson of his interview with Ye?

Trump White House removes WSJ from Scotland trip press pool over Epstein report (CNN).Hopefully the Journal reporters who were planning to join Trump for his golf trip are relieved that they can spend their newfound free time investigating more important stories, from Trump’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein to his unprecedented efforts to bully the press,” Stern told CNN.

This bill would fine social media companies $5 million every day for not fighting ‘terrorism’ (Reason). “The idea that the federal government even talked to social media platforms about their moderation was a major scandal … A bipartisan bill, however, would make it mandatory for social media companies to work with the federal government.”

Family, supporters urge release of Spanish-language journalist in ICE custody (The Associated Press). “Growing up, I didn’t always understand why my dad was so obsessed with his work, why he’d jump up and leave dinner to chase down a story. But now I do,” said Mario Guevara’s son, Oscar, who now works as a photojournalist.

FBI spied on journalists and activists who organized ‘Russiagate And WikiLeaks’ panel (The Dissenter). The surveillance was revealed by documents the FBI turned over to Defending Rights & Dissent as part of ongoing litigation under the Freedom of Information Act.