Errin Haines, founder and editor of the nonprofit news outlet
The 19th, asked the public to demand justice for Lemon and Fort.
“I think you’re already seeing so much public support for the issue of press freedom," Haines said during the Jan. 30 episode of
‘The Don Lemon Show’. “That is because the concern we are seeing is just not about one journalist. It’s not just about Don. It’s not just about Georgia. It’s whether reporters can do their job without fear of arrest.”
When journalists are detained for documenting events of public concern, Haines said, “everyone’s right to know is at risk.”
“If this can happen to a high-profile journalist the risk is even greater for local reporters, for freelancers, for journalists of color,” Haines said.
The Committee to Protect Journalists held a news conference on the arrests, as well as broader issues related to the freedom of the press in Minnesota, on Friday, Jan. 30.
CEO
Jodie Ginsburg said the state of press freedom was in many ways "much worse than what many of us had imagined" in November 2024. At the time, the
group's board issued a statement "in defense of a robust press that can report the facts and hold power to account freely and safely" following Trump's election to a second term.
The virtual news conference included comments by John Abernathy, a local independent
photographer who was detained while covering a protest over
the death of Renee Nicole Good, who was shot and
killed by ICE agent Jonathan Ross on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis.
Abernathy described being tackled and hit with pepper bullets during the Jan. 15 incident, adding that he told law enforcement he was a photographer but didn't have a visible marking identifying him as a member of the press.
"They're clearly targeting the press now," he said, adding that it makes him unsure whether having visible identification would be "helping you or hurting you" in such situations.
Lydia Polgreen, the committee's vice chair and a New York Times opinion columnist, said at the news conference there's been a "tremendous chilling effect" in particular on journalists who are working in the country but aren't U.S. citizens.
Knight First Amendment Institute Executive Director
Jameel Jaffer called for either the Justice Department to drop the prosecutions or for the courts to dismiss them.
"We are especially concerned about these arrests because they take place against the background of a broader effort by the Trump administration to tighten the vise around press freedom,” he said.