How press can survive interactions with police on the skirmish line
Photo courtesy of Stephanie Keith
Journalists have the right to cover protests and demonstrations.
Protests are one of the most dangerous places for journalists in America. Journalists are routinely prevented from gathering the news, illegally arrested, and attacked by law enforcement and demonstrators.
Journalists have a First Amendment right to cover public protests. Protecting and expanding that right ensures that the public can learn what’s happening at protests and how they are policed.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been assaulting journalists around the country, in some cases so severely that journalists have been hospitalized. Tell Congress to take a stand and demand answers.
Reporters from Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, and Portland, Oregon, share hard-won lessons on safety, sourcing, and documenting communities under siege.
A coalition of 23 press organizations spoke out against the charges — the prosecutor agreed
Stop the deportation of Guan Heng
Federal agents in Portland are waging war on the press
Plus: Administration ignores flotilla abuses
Plus: Tell your lawmakers to strengthen presidential library transparency
Atlanta journalist faces imminent deportation for reporting the news
Journalists must not be put on trial for covering protests
Setback won’t stop prosecutors’ effort to connect imaginary dots between speech and crime
Now the Trump administration is trying to destroy the right to document police by labeling it as an attack
Something went wrong and your email updates subscription could not be processed. Please visit our signup page and try again.
Thank you for encouraging Congress to speak out against ICE’s appalling attacks on journalists.
Share this message on social media: