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Journalists on RNC policing: ‘Dark days for press freedom in the U.S.’

September 06, 2008

As crews picked up after the RNC in downtown St. Paul Friday morning, a handful of local and national journalists went to City Hall and delivered 50,000 signatures pressuring St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman and the city and county attorneys to immediately release journalists who were recently arrested in connection to convention protests and to drop all charges against them.

Nancy Doyle Brown (pictured at the microphone above), a media reform organizer from the Twin Cities Media Alliance, said she and others want to send a message that “journalism is not a crime.” Journalists have “been detained and arrested, subjected to raids, pepper-sprayed and more simply for showing up to work. These have been dark days for press freedom in the U.S.,” she said.

According to a statement from the national media group Free Press, which is part of the counter-effort, volunteer legal counsel and news editors/directors tried to negotiate with police commanders for the release of reporters on the scene at the demonstration Thursday evening, “but [Ramsey County Sheriff Bob] Fletcher and [St. Paul Police Chief John] Harrington apparently intervened, they said, and ordered that the journalists be issued criminal citations. Once ticketed, the journalists were released.” Others have been tear-gassed or held at gunpoint.

Media professionals had pursued protesters as they marched from the Capitol lawn into the downtown area. “Law enforcement officers flanked the marchers and corralled them on bridges passing over Interstate 94,” and they were detained on the bridges while police processed them,” it continues.

“We’re demanding that all charges against journalists covering the RNC be immediately and unconditionally dropped. We respect the important role officers play in maintaining a safe place for people to exercise their freedom… tragically there are stories that the world needed to hear this week that will never be told. They won’t be told because the reporters working on them were sitting in the back of squad cars, stripped of their cameras, or were face down on the pavement with their hands tied behind their back,” said Brown.

Additionally, in a preemptive attack on journalists, homes where they were staying were raided over the past couple weeks. Twin Cities Daily Planet editor Mary Turck, vouched for that, while adding that one of her writers was arrested Thursday night. “Police are now holding personal belongings…and saying they can’t get them back till Monday. That is one example of the use of police power as sheer harassment for journalists,” said Turck.

One person who said he’s been subjected to it firsthand is Sharif Abdel Koubdous, a producer for the national radio/TV show Democracy Now, who was arrested twice this week and is now facing pending felony charges and for being a part of an “unlawful assembly.” “These charges are unacceptable. We are clearly marked as press… We were simply doing our job and nothing more. We shouldn’t be penalized for it,” he said.

Mike Buscko, with the Minnesota Newspaper Guild, which represents more than 450 local journalists, including some at the Pioneer Press, echoed their sentiments, saying, “We’re appalled by the treatment of journalists. It’s had a chilling effect on the coverage of the convention outside and in the street… The police were heavy-handed, and we’re concerned on a local and national basis.”

Inside City Hall, Deputy Mayor Ann Mulholland responded, “I know you take these seriously and as do we. We value your First Amendment rights and we value the rights of the media.” Overall, “We feel we conducted a great convention.” The Mayor “appreciates your rights, interests and abilities to cover stories.”

And in his office, City Attorney John Choi told reporters, “I’m a believer in justice.” Among the numerous arrests, most received citations and weren’t charged with a crime, he said, adding, “We’ll look at all the facts. We only proceed on cases where there’s probable cause to prosecute… This isn’t about politics or making decisions on political whims… I assure you we’ll do the right thing… Justice requires that we review these cases carefully and seriously.”

(Pictured here are the thousands of letters signed by people across the country, with the first 35 pages filled by Minnesotans.)

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Comments

Anonymous's picture

City response to RNC arrests

The City is obviously sugarcoating all this because they want to minimize lawsuits. But you can bet there WILL BE many lawsuits. Chris Coleman’s leadership has been nonexistent. The City has been a big disappointment, on many levels, some of which have resulted in extreme civil liberties violations and criminal acts of thugs hiding behind riot gear. Channel 9’s report by Trish Pilsum of a girl who repeatedly said i love you to the riot cops and they just kept spraying and spraying her with chemicals was the saddest thing i think I’ve ever seen….

Anonymous's picture

What a Joke

What a Joke…..the journalist were just fueling the fire. If they would not have given the (Illegal Protesters) the attention and publicity maybe they would not have been so violent. They deserved to be arrested and so did the trouble makers.

Anonymous's picture

I believe that you will

I believe that you will ultimately find that the vast majority of the citizens of Saint Paul, liberals, conservatives, Obama supporters, and McCain people alike, support and applaud the Saint Paul Police for their measured response to the demonstrations and violence.

Among my circle of friends and co-workers, most of whom despise Shrub with a passion and dearly miss the biting pen and wit of Molly Ivins, there is almost unanimous support for the way the Saint Paul Police handled the convention. There is no question that a faction of the demonstrators wanted and intended violence.

I have spent the last one and one-half years watching this develop so my agency, which is not connected to law enforcement, would be prepared to operate, provide mandated services, and secure our facilities. The RNC Welcoming Committee, Trannnies and Queers from Chicago, Pitsburg Organizing Committee, and many other anacchist groups have shown by their web posting, statements, and actions on Monday that their intent was lawlessness and violence. This may be an inconvenient truth for some people, but the actions, publications, websites, and statements speak for themselves.

I have lived in Saint Paul all my life, my family lives here and my kids attend the Saint Paul Public Schools. I thank and applaud the Saint Paul Police for ensuring the safety of our citizens.

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