As FPF’s Advocacy Director Seth Stern wrote, there is some ambiguity to the order, in that it doesn’t specifically name the press. “But even if the court did mean to exclude the press from the order, and inadvertently failed to say so, the effect is the same: a constitutionally intolerable chilling effect on journalists’ ability to report news without fear of punishment,” he added.
Read: The first prior restraint: Judge bars media from publishing on expelled student suing UNC system; and the second: Judge again bars media from publishing on expelled student or his lawsuit
These are among the seven gag orders issued this year; three are still pending, including this one in North Carolina.
Journalists covering domestic reactions to the Israel-Hamas war
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a co-founding partner of the Tracker, more than 30 journalists have been killed this month in the Israel-Hamas war. In the U.S., the Tracker has been closely following domestic events as journalists cover demonstrations related to the conflict. To date, we’ve documented two press freedom aggressions.
Freelance journalist Talia Ben-Ora told the Tracker she was assaulted on Oct. 8 while documenting the second of two rallies in New York City. After filming and publishing excerpts from a pro-Palestinian rally, she said she headed to a rally in support of Israel. There, she said, she was harassed by some who claimed that her coverage of the earlier demonstration was a show of her support for Hamas, the militant group. Ben-Ora called the assertions “heinous slander,” and a deliberate attempt to provoke the crowd to violence. She was tripped, had her press pass briefly stolen and was escorted away from the rally by New York Police Department officers.
On Oct. 20, freelance photojournalist Eric Marks was detained for 30 minutes and cited with jaywalking while covering a gathering in support of Palestine in Reno, Nevada.
Read: Assaults of journalists documented in the Tracker
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The Tracker is now in its seventh year of documentation, enabling this type of year-over-year data. Your support is crucial to this work; donate today.
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