More journalists have been arrested in 2024 than the last two years combined. Plus, George Floyd's murder and what it meant for media covering BLM.
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Friends of the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker:
Welcome back to your newsletter around press freedom violations in the United States. Find archived editions here ([link removed]) , and get this newsletter directly in your inbox by signing up here ([link removed]) .
A snapshot of all incidents documented in the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker so far this year. — U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
One month later — arrests have doubled
In my last newsletter, I wrote about journalists covering local reaction ([link removed]) to the Israel-Gaza war, noting that as April came to an end, we had documented 13 arrests or detainments of members of the press, and were actively reporting on more. Active, indeed: As of today, we’ve documented 36 ([link removed]) .
Importantly, the number of journalists arrested or detained so far this year — which is not even half over — is more than the last two years combined ([link removed]) .
In addition to arrests, we’ve captured more than 30 assaults ([link removed]) of journalists under our “Israel-Gaza war” ([link removed]) tag since Oct. 7, 2023 — seven of those on student journalists — and nine reports ([link removed]) of damaged equipment.
Aggressions against media covering Israel-Gaza war. — U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
Four years after Floyd — looking back at attacks on journalists
Our data shows that year-over-year, protests ([link removed]) remain dangerous places for journalists.
No more so than four years ago this month when videos of a white Minneapolis police officer killing George Floyd, a Black man, went viral. The resulting large-scale national protests against police brutality — met with aggressive law enforcement reaction — were covered coast-to-coast by journalists, hundreds of whom were also arrested or assaulted, often tear-gassed and hit with projectiles like rubber bullets.
In the two weeks following Floyd’s murder on May 25, 2020, more than 300 ([link removed]) journalists were assaulted while covering protests across the U.S. To put that in perspective, those two weeks doubled the number of assaults in the entire database at the time.
By the time Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer, was convicted on multiple counts of Floyd’s murder in April 2021, more than 630 journalists had been assaulted — 85% by law enforcement.
From the May 2020 murder of George Floyd to the conviction of his assailant in April 2021, the vast majority of assaults of journalists covering BLM came at the hands of law enforcement officers.
In addition to assaults, numerous journalists covering Black Lives Matter over the years have been arrested or detained — 180 total — or had their equipment damaged or seized, or were subpoenaed for reporting materials. You can search the database using the tag “Black Lives Matter ([link removed]) ” and read more about it here:
Read our special section: BLM and unprecedented aggressions against media ([link removed])
More in the Tracker
For the latest on press freedom aggressions across the U.S., explore the database ([link removed]) and follow the Tracker on social media — we’re on X ([link removed]) and Instagram ([link removed]) . Your support is crucial to this work; donate today ([link removed]) .
Best,
Kirstin McCudden
Managing Editor, U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
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