NEW YORK — A New York City journalist was arrested Tuesday on charges that he accompanied a group of pro-Palestinian protesters as they hurled red paint at the homes of top leaders at the Brooklyn Museum earlier this summer.
Samuel Seligson, an independent videographer, faces felony hate crime charges.
According to a criminal complaint written by a police detective, Seligson, 31, traveled with the group of vandals as they defaced the facades of two apartments belonging to the museum's director and president. The activists are accused of spray-painting doors and sidewalks with messages that accused the two leaders of supporting genocide. A banner hung at the home of the museum's Jewish president called her a ''white-supremacist Zionist.''
Seligson's attorney, Leena Widdi, said her client was acting in his capacity as a credentialed member of the media, describing the hate crime charges as an ''appalling'' overreach by police and prosecutors. She said police had twice raided his Brooklyn home before he turned himself in early Tuesday.
While the complaint described Seligson as a participant in the crime, a law enforcement official said he was not directly involved in the spray-painting or property damage. The official spoke with The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the ongoing investigation.
The arrest has drawn condemnations from press freedom groups, while raising questions about the rights of a journalist to document illegal activity. Seligson, who is Jewish, is a fixture at New York City protests and has licensed and sold footage to mainstream outlets, including Reuters and ABC News.
''Samuel is being charged for alleged behavior that is protected by the First amendment and consistent with his job as a credentialed member of the press,'' Widdi said in an email. ''What is even more concerning, however, is that this member of the press is being charged with a hate crime.''
Seligson was arraigned Tuesday afternoon in Brooklyn on eight counts of criminal mischief, four of which were classified as a hate crime. He was released on supervision.