Three Minnesota law school professors say the arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort represent a troubling attack on freedom of the press and a misuse of a federal law that has never before been used to prosecute reporters.
Lemon and Fort were arrested on Thursday and Friday, nearly two weeks after they documented an anti-ICE demonstration during a church service on Jan. 18 at Cities Church in St. Paul. Protesters disrupted the service because one of the church’s pastors, David Easterwood, works as the acting director of ICE’s local field office.
The federal government has sought to charge Lemon and Fort for allegedly conspiring to deprive rights and interfering with someone’s religious freedom in a house of worship. Also arrested were politician and Black Lives Matter-Minnesota co-founder Trahern Crews and DFL activist and former state House staffer Jamael Lundy. A federal judge ordered the release of all four on Friday.
Julie Jonas, a law professor at the University of St. Thomas, called the arrests “absolutely an attack on the press” and said the journalists have a strong First Amendment defense.
“What the administration is basically saying is that you can’t report on this unless we approve of what you’re reporting on,” Jonas said of the arrests. “They are trying to chill journalistic endeavors, and they’re successful in many ways.”
Beyond their concern of freedom of the press, some believe Lemon and Fort’s cases represent a misuse of the crime being alleged — violation of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act of 1994.
It prohibits injuring, intimidating or interfering with someone from obtaining or providing reproductive health services, but it also bans anyone from restricting the First Amendment right of “religious freedom at a place of religious worship.”
In order to violate those laws, someone must either intentionally injure, intimidate or interfere with another person, Jonas explained.