From the Courts, Part I
In the week immediately following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May 2020, more journalists covering protests there were assaulted or arrested by law enforcement than in the entirety of 2019.
Being the Tracker, we have receipts: Across social justice protests in 2020 and 2021, we documented 41 arrests or detainments of journalists covering protests and 91 assaults of journalists by law enforcement in Minnesota alone. (card)
So it was a huge win for press freedom when journalists, represented by the ACLU of Minnesota, in a lawsuit against the Minnesota State Patrol reached a “ground-breaking” settlement agreement this month. It awarded $825,000 to journalists assaulted or arrested by MSP while covering protests over the police killings of Floyd and Daunte Wright, another Black man shot in nearby Brooklyn Center in April 2021. The settlement also bars the MSP from, among other things, attacking or arresting journalists and searching or seizing equipment while enacting policy changes, like training on media treatment and First Amendment rights.
Find details of the journalists in the lawsuit and their press freedom incidents here in the Tracker.
And this is a good time to give snaps to our web team and Tracker Senior Reporter Stephanie Sugars for quietly, manually, incredibly improving the metadata in our database to enable you to search litigation for journalists with incidents by type, status and case number.
Sugars also details this litigation and the progress of dozens of lawsuits brought by journalists arrested or assaulted while covering Black Lives Matters protests here: At least 60 journalists have sued police following arrests, assaults at protests - US Press Freedom Tracker
Freedom of the Press Foundation’s Executive Director, Trevor Timm, writes that this settlement is a good reminder how agents at the state and local level have the most power to protect — or curtail — journalist’s rights.
“We hope this settlement will become a model around the country for other journalists seeking accountability, and judges in those cases should take note.”
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