Los Angeles Times

No charges for KPCC reporter

Josie Huang, who was violently arrested, didn’t interfere with deputies, officials say.

- By James Queally

Josie Huang was violently arrested and accused of interferin­g with deputies.

A KPCC reporter who was slammed to the ground and accused of interferin­g with an arrest the night two Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputies were shot in Compton will not face criminal charges, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office said Thursday.

Josie Huang, 39, was arrested outside St. Francis Hospital in Lynwood on Sept. 12 after deputies alleged she tried to interfere with the arrest of a protester. The incident drew widespread condemnati­on from journalism organizati­ons and politician­s, criticism that worsened after video of the incident captured on Huang’s cellphone seemingly disproved allegation­s levied by Sheriff Alex Villanueva.

“Ms. Huang was in a public area f ilming a protest. When asked to back up, she is almost immediatel­y grabbed by deputies and taken to the ground, giving her little if any time to comply,” prosecutor­s wrote in a memo declining to file criminal charges. “It does not appear that she was intentiona­lly attempting to interfere with the deputies, but merely trying to record the occurrence.”

Hours earlier, someone had walked up to a Sheriff ’s Department cruiser near the Compton Metro station and opened f ire on the two deputies, both of whom suffered gunshot wounds to the head. The deputies — a 31year- old woman and a 24year- old man who have not been identified — were seriously wounded.

In the hours after the shooting, a small group of protesters went to the hospital where the deputies were being treated, some of whom were chanting that they hoped the deputies died. Recordings that Huang posted to Twitter the day after the incident showed her approachin­g deputies as they arrested a man. The deputies ordered her to back up, but almost immediatel­y took her to the ground.

The Sheriff ’s Department initially alleged that Huang failed to identify herself as a reporter. But Huang’s phone kept recording while she was in handcuffs, showing deputies stomp on the device and ignore her as she continuall­y announced she was a reporter for KPCC.

Villanueva told the Associated Press that Huang had “crossed the line from journalism to activism” and defended his deputies’ actions.

In a statement, a Sheriff ’s Department spokeswoma­n said the agency “values the media and highly respects the freedom of the press” but maintained that deputies believed Huang “inserted herself too close to the highly charged situation as an arrest was being made.”

“It is unfortunat­e this incident took place during a time in which our focus was on the horrific attempted assassinat­ion of two of our deputies. The events during that time were very tense and rapidly evolving,” the statement said.

Separate investigat­ions of the arrest are being carried out by county Inspector General Max Huntsman and the Sheriff ’s Department’s Internal Affairs Bureau.

Huang said she appreciate­d the district attorney’s office’s decision and was thankful prosecutor­s reviewed her cellphone video. But she isn’t done challengin­g the Sheriff ’s Department’s narrative.

“I am seeking a finding of ‘ factual innocence’ that will wipe this unlawful arrest from my record,” she said. “More than ever, I am grateful for the 1st Amendment, which entitles all Americans — not just journalist­s — to the rights of free speech and assembly.”

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