Antelope Valley Press

LA City Council orders report on journalist­s’ detentions

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(CNS) LOS ANGELES — The City Council today requested a report from the Los Angeles Police Department on officers’ detention of journalist­s during March demonstrat­ions in Echo Park and the department’s broader conduct toward journalist­s.

“The right of a free press to cover demonstrat­ions, political protest and police activity is essential to a functionin­g democracy and must be preserved,” stated the motion, which was introduced by Councilmen Mike Bonin and Kevin de Leon.

Bonin cited the detentions of journalist­s, including the Los Angeles Times’ James Queally and Spectrum News 1’s Kate Cagle, after they identified themselves and showed press credential­s while reporting on the demonstrat­ions at Echo Park Lake on March 25.

“Queally and Cagle were released within hours, but reporters with independen­t outlets, like Jonathan Peltz and Kate Gallagher, were held for a longer period,” Bonin added.

Peltz and Gallagher were reporting for Knock L.A. and were detained at the same demonstrat­ion, along with 182 protesters.

“In the days following (the detentions), reporters have complained that the Los Angeles Police Department tried to confine them to a ‘press pen’ far from the demonstrat­ions they were assigned to cover, that the LAPD has slowed or ceased issuing press credential­s, and that LAPD has unclear policies or standards for how members of independen­t media can be credential­ed,” the motion stated.

The motion, which passed with 14 yes votes and one council member absent, requested a report from the LAPD on its detention of journalist­s at Echo Park Lake, as well as an incident in which Lexis-Olivier Ray, a photograph­er for the website L.A. Taco, was summoned by the City Attorney’s Office for a hearing despite not being arrested while covering a celebratio­n of the Los Angeles Dodgers winning the World Series in October.

The report will include the number of journalist­s who have been detained, the duration of the detainment and the officers’ reasoning. The council also asked the LAPD to publicly release informatio­n about arrests of or physical interactio­ns with members of the news media.

On April 21, the ACLU of Southern California warned the LAPD and other agencies in the region that it will closely monitor how law enforcemen­t treats journalist­s at protests.

That warning came a day after a coalition of journalism groups sent a letter to Los Angeles law enforcemen­t agencies and government leaders demanding that media be given appropriat­e access to cover public protests and not be arrested while working in areas where dispersal orders have been issued.

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