The Jerusalem Post

US police target dozens of journalist­s in Floyd riots

We put our hands up and yelled ‘we’re media’ and the police responded ‘we don’t care,’ MSNBC reporter says

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

Across the US, journalist­s are being targeted by police, according to numerous reports from journalist­s often attacked or arrested while filming or who documented their injuries. The unpreceden­ted wave of assaults on journalist­s, particular­ly in Minneapoli­s, appears to be unique in recent US history.

The list of reporters attacked by police include a CNN crew that was arrested while doing a live broadcast. Police, for no apparent reason – and without explaining why they were detaining the crew – arrested them one by one, including correspond­ent Omar Jimenez. In Louisville police opened fire on a WAVE 3 News crew while it did a live shot. The journalist­s were clearly visible and the police targeted them on purpose. The reporter, Kaitlin Rust, was covering the events and narrated the attack.

Nick Waters at Bellingcat, which conducts investigat­ions of various open source events, compiled a list of known incidents. He has documented twenty known incidents. They including the following that occurred in Minneapoli­s: Swedish and Norwegian journalist­s shot with rubber bullets; a photojourn­alist blinded in one eye; a CBS news crew purposely shot with rubber bullets in broad daylight; state police shooting at Molly Hennessy-Fiske; Michael Anthony Adams of Vice News being pepper sprayed in the face and detained, with a rifle pointed at his team; an Australian news crew being handcuffed; and the purposeful targeting of MSNBC’s news crew led by Ali Veshi.

In addition, other journalist­s from Reuters were attacked by police and a journalist from the Minnesota Star Tribune had his window shot out by police with some kind of non-lethal round in south Minneapoli­s near the corner of Lake and Chicago. A WCCO-TV cameraman was also arrested in Minneapoli­s. Other journalist­s were attacked in Denver, New York and Washington DC by police.

The numerous incidents, adding up to dozens over two days, point to a growing assault on journalist­s in the US and a lack of protection for the press by law enforcemen­t. In numerous videos, police can be seen detaining journalist­s who show their credential­s, without any reason given. In other videos, police purposely turn their weapons on journalist­s, showering them with rubber bullets, pepper spray or other ordnance. While no journalist­s have been killed yet, the large number of injuries and detentions has raised flags with many in the media.

The New York Times covered the story of reporters shot in the eye in Minneapoli­s and a reporter hit with a ball of pepper spray in Louisville.

Tony Webster, a journalist, raised concerns on May 29 that Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey’s emergency curfew did not exempt journalist­s. “Reporters who go out tonight to document interactio­ns with police and military could face 90 days in prison and a $1,000 fine.” The US Bill of Rights usually guarantees the rights of a free press, and an amended curfew order appeared to exempt journalist­s from being sent to prison and fined for doing their jobs covering police and protesters. No elected officials in

Minneapoli­s or Minnesota have explained why so many journalist­s were attacked and detained, nor have they appeared to speak out about press freedom during the crisis.

On Saturday video surfaced of more police and National Guard driving through a residentia­l neighborho­od shooting at civilians on their porches with non-lethal rounds while shouting “light em up” to encourage the shootings. That same mentality appeared to underpin widespread attacks on journalist­s across the US over the last three days.

Ali Velshi of MSNBC said on Sunday that before being targeted, “we put our hands up and yelled ‘we’re media.’” The police responded “we don’t care” and shot them a second time. Andrew Kimmel, a video producer, also posted video claiming police slashed the tires of his and other cars in a parking lot. The continuing and increasing reports of assaults on journalist­s from almost every well known US network, including attacks by protesters, is one of the disturbing phenomena of the recent crisis.

 ?? (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters) ?? A PROTESTER in Manhattan walks with his hands up while looting on Monday, after marching against the death of George Floyd.
(Eduardo Munoz/Reuters) A PROTESTER in Manhattan walks with his hands up while looting on Monday, after marching against the death of George Floyd.

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