Connecticut Post

Prosecutor defends his failed effort to convict Iowa journalist

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IOWA CITY, Iowa — An Iowa prosecutor defended his unsuccessf­ul pursuit of charges against a journalist who was arrested while covering a protest, saying Thursday that he believed the evidence was strong and that dismissing the case would have amounted to special treatment.

Polk County Attorney John Sarcone, a Democrat who has held office since 1991, dismissed the outrage he has faced over his decision to prosecute Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri as unwarrante­d.

A Des Moines police officer pepper-sprayed and arrested Sahouri last May while she was on assignment reporting at a chaotic

Black Lives Matter protest outside a mall. Sahouri, 25, was charged with disobeying police orders to disperse and interferin­g with the officer who arrested her.

A jury acquitted Sahouri of both misdemeano­rs Wednesday after a threeday trial. Outside observers said they were stunned by the weakness of the prosecutio­n’s evidence and baffled by Sarcone’s decision to pursue the case for nine months.

“We felt there was more than sufficient facts to establish the case. Based on the facts and the law, we proceeded,” Sarcone told The Associated Press by phone Thursday. “We bring cases to jurors and let them decide. What I have a hard time understand­ing is how everyone wants to shortcircu­it the jury process.”

Dozens of press freedom and civil liberties groups asked Sarcone to dismiss the charges last summer, saying Sahouri was doing her job and that journalist­s must be free to cover protests. They blasted Sarcone after her acquittal for pursuing what they called a disgracefu­l abuse of prosecutor­ial discretion that wasted tax dollars.

Sarcone said he could not let outside pressure or criticism influence prosecutor­ial decisions. Dropping the case because of her status as a reporter and support from outside groups would have amounted to special treatment, he said.

Sarcone denied that he had any “ulterior motive” in pursuing a case against a newspaper that has been critical of him over the years. He said Des Moines police investigat­ors believed Sahouri broke the law by remaining near members of an unlawful assembly who were damaging commercial property and throwing rocks at officers after they were told to leave. His office agreed.

“She got arrested an hour-and-a-half after dispersal orders were given. Those are lawful orders. People can’t defy those lawful orders,“Sarcone said. “No one is above the law.”

But the evidence at trial suggested those orders weren’t clear, and Sahouri and others testified that they never heard them. The orders were issued 90 minutes before Sahouri was arrested as police were trying to clear an intersecti­on where protesters surrounded a squad car. Officers were also heard telling protesters to “back up” and protest peacefully.

Sahouri continued her reporting and was later pepper-sprayed and arrested while getting away from another location where police deployed tear gas to disperse protesters.

Officer Luke Wilson claimed that she briefly resisted arrest by moving her arm away as she was temporaril­y blinded from the chemicals. He said he failed to record the arrest on his body camera and did not notify his supervisor, which are both violations of department policy.

Sahouri, who is Palestinia­n-American, repeatedly identified herself as a journalist but was jailed nonetheles­s. A white Register colleague, Katie Akin, was next to her and was not arrested. A different officer testified that he let Akin go because she seemed compliant and scared.

Sarcone denied allegation­s that the reporters’ races played a role in their treatment, saying Akin “probably got lucky” to not be arrested.

Sahouri told the AP on Thursday that she was the only journalist arrested that day, and she said it was “extremely ironic” that prosecutor­s used footage from television reporters at the scene in their case against her. She rejected a plea deal before trial in which she would have pleaded guilty to failure to disperse and the other charge would have been dismissed, saying she was grateful that the Register funded her defense.

“I was doing my job while complying with police orders,” she said. “I literally did nothing wrong.”

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