Los Angeles Times

LAPD detains, arrests reporters

LAPD orders were confusing and some journalist­s were detained for hours, reporters say.

- By Kevin Rector

Journalist­s say police gave confusing orders during Echo Park protest Thursday.

Reporters and legal observers who were detained or arrested by the Los Angeles Police Department during a mass arrest of protesters in Echo Park on Thursday night were sounding alarms Friday — accusing the LAPD of ignoring their legitimate role in monitoring such events on the ground.

They also accused the LAPD of issuing confusing directives and attempting to force media members into a designated observatio­n area that would not have allowed them to see the protest or the arrests that followed.

While some detained reporters and observers were released without being arrested, others — including reporters for less-establishe­d media brands — were held for hours and then formally charged, raising additional questions about police picking and choosing which outlets to acknowledg­e as legitimate.

“It’s an absurd conflict of interest,” said Jonathan Peltz, who was arrested while covering the events for Knock LA, a nonprofit newsroom affiliated with the progressiv­e activist group Ground Game LA. “It should just be widely accepted that [police] are not the people who decide who is a journalist or where a media pen is.”

Julian Andrews, a TV cameraman who was in the field with Spectrum News reporter Kate Cagle and another colleague, said the actions of the LAPD — who led Cagle away and zip-tied her hands minutes before a planned live shot — were “unbelievab­le.”

“They knew she was a reporter. We were cameramen trying to do a story. We weren’t causing any disruption,” Andrews said. “I was honestly shocked. I couldn’t believe it.”

Cagle was later released without arrest, as was James Queally, a reporter for The Times who also was detained while covering the protest. Queally called the experience “maddening.”

At one point, Peltz said, he was sitting next to Queally, both of them in zip ties, commiserat­ing about the LAPD’s actions.

“What is this, arrest-a-journalist night?” Queally quipped.

The LAPD said Friday that officers had made “extraordin­ary efforts” to allow the protest to play out peacefully but ultimately arrested 182 people after declaring the gathering near Lemoyne Street and Park Avenue unlawful and issuing a dispersal order. They cited the alleged use of strobe lights by some in the crowd as the reason for the order, saying attempts to extract only those responsibl­e for the lights had been rebuffed by the larger crowd.

“Once the decision was made to initiate arrests, the crowd was surrounded and individual­ly taken into custody without incidence of force or injury,” the LAPD said. It also said that two officers suffered minor injuries and that officers fired 10 hard foam or beanbag projectile­s during the course of the protest “in response to projectile­s thrown at officers.”

The department said three people among those detained identified themselves as members of the media, while others identified themselves as legal observers with the National Lawyers Guild, and that those people were “released at scene without further action.”

Not everyone who said they were a reporter was released, though. Among those who went to jail were Peltz and his Knock LA colleague, Kate Gallagher.

Peltz said he had heard the LAPD make an announceme­nt about the media, but couldn’t make it out fully. It just sounded as though they were telling media to leave, which didn’t sound legitimate to him, he said.

“Nobody knows how to take that. It doesn’t sound legal. I’ve never heard that at another protest,” he said. “There seems to be a willingnes­s on the part of the police force to not have any consistent rules or laws for people to follow, yet their excuse for arresting people is they weren’t following the rules.”

Once Peltz was detained, he said, he told police he was press but was ignored.

“You just got the feeling that you either weren’t believed or it didn’t really matter,” he said. When he later found out that reporters with LAPD-issued credential­s from larger outlets were released, he was frustrated, he said.

“Why are they the ones giving out these credential­s?” he said of police. “Why are they the ones deciding, especially when they are the ones being written about?”

Peltz’s editor, Liam Fitzpatric­k, said he spent a frantic few hours trying to find out where Peltz and Gallagher had been taken, which ended up being the Metropolit­an Detention Center downtown.

“I called the Metro Detention Center asking if they’d been booked ... and they gave me that cop runaround thing like, ‘Well they’re not in the system yet so we can’t say where they are,’ ” Fitzpatric­k said. “We couldn’t find where anybody was. We called and left messages for the media-relations officers. Didn’t hear anything.”

In a statement, the National Lawyers Guild denounced the actions of the LAPD, including the detention of its members and members of the media, as “unlawful and shameful” and reflective of tactics that have been the subject of legal settlement­s against the department in the past.

It did not say how many of its members were detained, but called on City Atty. Mike Feuer to drop all charges stemming from the protest.

The ACLU of Southern California condemned the LAPD’s actions as a misguided attempt to hide from scrutiny the “militarize­d action” its officers were taking to clear Echo Park Lake.

“Mass arrests of protesters, legal observers and journalist­s will not keep the city’s brutal, ill-conceived actions from being known,” the ACLU said. “The city leaders who approved this approach should be held accountabl­e.”

Andrews, the TV cameraman who filmed his Spectrum News colleague Kate Cagle getting plucked out of the crowd by officers, said he questions what motivated police to detain her, even if they did eventually let her go.

Andrews said Cagle had told him to start recording as she stepped forward to prepare for her live shot, just in case she was arrested. He said he had laughed in response, thinking the idea ridiculous, but started recording anyway.

Then it happened. Cagle, square in the frame of his camera, was approached by several officers, grabbed and pulled away, even though it was absolutely clear she was a reporter, Andrews said.

“They came for her, right when she was out in the open,” he said. “I can’t believe it.”

 ?? LATIMES.COM Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS BOARD an LAPD bus Thursday night after being arrested in Echo Park. Police arrested 182 people after declaring the gathering unlawful, citing the alleged use of strobe lights by some in the crowd.
LATIMES.COM Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS BOARD an LAPD bus Thursday night after being arrested in Echo Park. Police arrested 182 people after declaring the gathering unlawful, citing the alleged use of strobe lights by some in the crowd.
 ??  ?? POLICE APPROACH protesters on Sunset Boulevard. The LAPD said officers fired 10 hard foam or beanbag rounds “in response to projectile­s thrown” at police.
POLICE APPROACH protesters on Sunset Boulevard. The LAPD said officers fired 10 hard foam or beanbag rounds “in response to projectile­s thrown” at police.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States