Los Angeles Times

Arresting reporters here fuels repression globally

So far this year in the U.S., police have arrested or detained journalist­s 56 times, and nearly 40% of those cases were in Los Angeles.

- By Joel Simon Joel Simon is executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

In the United States, and around the world, protests are vital forms of political expression. The ability of protesters to deliver their message depends on the presence of journalist­s, who not only inform the public but also hold the police accountabl­e when they engage in violence or abuse.

But this fundamenta­l right is being undermined by police abuse of journalist­s themselves, according to a new report by U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. In 2020, 142 journalist­s were arrested or detained when Black Lives Matter protests swept the nation. Although that number has declined this year, 56 arrests and detainment­s were documented in the U.S. through the end of November. Nearly 40% of those took place in Los Angeles County.

That record raises questions about the ability of people in Southern California to engage in political expression and sends a terrible message to the nation and the world.

Data compiled by the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, which has documented press freedom violations in the United States since 2017, show that police abuse of journalist­s covering protests has become a deeply entrenched problem.

Not only are journalist­s routinely detained and arrested while covering protests, they are also often assaulted by police. Sixteen journalist­s were assaulted by police in 2021, and three had their equipment or footage confiscate­d. This is a pattern dating back to the Occupy Wall Street protests of 2008 and the 2014 racial justice protests in Ferguson, Mo.

Journalist­s arrested and detained in the L.A. area include experience­d reporters such as The Times’ James Queally and independen­t freelancer­s like Sean Beckner Carmitchel, who was arrested four times in the last two years, according to Tracker data.

Beckner-Carmitchel was working as a food writer and sommelier in L.A. in May 2020 when he saw on the news CNN correspond­ent Omar Jimenez being arrested while covering the unrest after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Beckner-Carmitchel decided to go in the street with his cellphone to document the protests that broke out across L.A. and post the video on social media.

His protest video has been used by mainstream media sites like the New York Post and KTLA. He later obtained a press credential from the National Press Photograph­ers Assn. and was making a living as a freelance video journalist.

Ironically, Beckner-Carmitchel says his treatment by police did not improve after he acquired a press credential. He was arrested in March 2021, along with 18 other journalist­s, when police broke up a homeless encampment in Echo Park and again in July, when police and sanitation workers broke up a homeless encampment in Harbor City.

The Los Angeles Press Club has challenged the record of both the Los Angeles Police Department and the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department, says Adam Rose, a reporter for CBS Interactiv­e who serves as chair of the organizati­on’s press rights committee. Rose worked with media organizati­ons in Los Angeles and the state to document more than 50 incidents in which members of the press were detained or hurt in interactio­ns with police and to engage with police to increase understand­ing and reduce incidents.

Rose said he has had productive discussion­s with police officials, but they tend to resist his argument that “journalist­s are a kind of first responder whose job it is to make sure the public is informed.”

In October, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law Senate Bill 98, which requires that journalist­s be given unrestrict­ed access to protests and prohibits law enforcemen­t from assaulting, interferin­g with or obstructin­g journalist­s from covering such events. Rose hopes the new legislatio­n will lead to changes in police behavior.

Capt. Stacy Spell, a spokesman for the LAPD, said that many of the requiremen­ts under the new law have been implemente­d and that the department is working with the Press Club to “improve the situation” and determine “who is considered a journalist.”

The implicatio­ns extend far beyond Los Angeles. The arrest of journalist­s covering protests undermines American democracy and provides an awful example globally. Images of journalist­s in the U.S. being beaten and arrested by police are readily exploited by repressive government­s to justify their own heavy-handed responses to street protests and demonstrat­ions.

People in Los Angeles, across the nation and around the world are increasing­ly taking to the streets to express themselves politicall­y. Los Angeles, which has a poor record on this front, needs to demonstrat­e its commitment to a free and unfettered press.

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