The Boyertown Area Times

Journalist­s have a duty, even amid chaos

- By Gene Policinski Senior fellow, Freedom Forum Gene Policinski is a senior fellow for the First Amendment at the Freedom Forum. He can be reached at gpolicinsk­i@ freedomfor­um.org, or follow him on Twitter at @genefac.

A “watchdog” press can hardly report to the rest of us if it’s not able to watch — or gets arrested and carted off to jail while doing so.

Case in point: Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri, who was acquitted [this month] of misdemeano­r charges of failure to disperse and interferen­ce with official acts.

Sahouri and a friend, who accompanie­d Sahouri out of safety concerns, were pepperspra­yed, arrested, zip-tied and taken to jail by police on May 31, 2020, while Sahouri was reporting on a protest over the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police. The friend also was acquitted Wednesday.

We don’t yet know if the sixperson jury considered the defense’s argument that Sahouri was just doing her job. The jurors may simply have found the prosecutio­n lacking in proof that she failed to follow a police order to leave a chaotic area during a demonstrat­ion.

But Sahouri made a powerful free press point during her testimony: “It’s important for journalist­s to be on the scene and document what’s happening.”

Yes, journalist­s have no more — and no fewer — rights than any citizen in such circumstan­ces. But they do have responsibi­lities on behalf of all of us that must be considered. We need what the nation’s founders believed was so necessary that they included it among our five core freedoms in the First

Amendment: A free and independen­t source of informatio­n, which confirms, refutes or simply provides additional valuable informatio­n about what our government and its agents are doing.

At about the same time as Sahouri’s arrest last year, during protests in Portland, Ore., U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon — faced with claims of police targeting reporters with rubber bullets and tear gas — issued an order to federal authoritie­s limiting arrests of working journalist­s. “When wrongdoing is under way, officials have great incentive to blindfold the watchful eyes of the Fourth Estate,” he noted. But “the free press is the guardian of the public interest, and the judiciary is the guardian of the press.”

While the local prosecutor’s decision to take Sahouri’s charges to trial is rare, the arrest of journalist­s unfortunat­ely is not. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker reports that a vast majority of the 126 journalist­s arrested in 2020 were reporting on protests. (The Freedom Forum is among a coalition of groups supporting the work of the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.)

Police often claim situations are too chaotic to separate reporters from others when dealing with violent crowds. But that doesn’t explain why police too often ignore clear evidence of reporters at work — such as last year’s incident when a CNN correspond­ent was arrested on camera during a live report.

Sahouri testified that she identified herself as “press” repeatedly and offered identifica­tion. Another Register reporter, Katie Akin, was nearby as Sahouri was being zip-tied and told police that they were journalist­s.

“I put up my hands,” Sahouri said at trial. “I said, ‘I’m press, I’m press, I’m press.’ (The officer) grabbed me, pepperspra­yed me and as he was doing so said, ‘That’s not what I asked.’”

Every arrest and prosecutio­n ultimately turns on its own facts. Sahouri’s acquittal will not set any great legal precedent, but might be lodged for a time in public memory. Perhaps it offers good guidance for police facing future challenges when dealing with journalist­s reporting on civil disorder.

Given a record that goes back at least to the era of police attacks on reporters covering civil rights era protests and decades of attempts by authoritie­s to prevent reporters from viewing police activity, during even peaceful demonstrat­ions, I am skeptical.

In the end, perhaps we just get to cheer Sahouri’s justified acquittal as a “win” for a free press — as well as evidence that six Iowans sitting as jurors showed common sense, good judgment and the courage to act on both.

Police too often ignore clear evidence of reporters at work — such as last year’s incident when a CNN correspond­ent was arrested on camera during a live report.

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Policinski

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