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Reporters beware at upcoming conventions

From the Summer 2008 issue of The News Media & The Law, page 12.

Before they are keepsakes, relegated to storage boxes and pinned to office walls, media credentials for political conventions are supposed to be something of a safeguard. They should guarantee some level of access to the event itself and — perhaps in conjunction with press passes assigned by the local police agency — help reporters cover the protests outside.

It’s doesn’t always work out so smoothly. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press has set up free hotlines for journalists covering the political conventions since 1972, and every year reports of interference with the media — and worse — have mounted.

It’s something reporters heading to Denver and St. Paul in August need to be aware of.

The 2004 conventions

Three years after the Sept. 11 attacks, security was a prime concern at the Republican National Convention in New York City.

Daniel Jones, a journalist with WRDR radio, applied for and got credentials from the convention and the New York Police Department. But neither set of press passes was good enough on Aug. 31, 2004 when the police and the Secret Service detained him after finding on him anti-Bush protest schedules. He’d gotten them from demonstrators. He was held for more than three hours, and had his credentials taken away.

More than a dozen reporters like Jones, some with credentials and some without, were detained during the convention. Some were held for more than 24 hours.

The Reporters Committee’s hotline took about 9 or 10 calls during the convention from reporters needing its free legal assistance. Attorneys from the law firm Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz staffed and sponsored the hotline, which was manned by lawyers who’d been trained in working in the New York criminal courts. One hotline attorney had arranged with the police to guide journalists caught up in the detainment of protesters to be quickly released.

One issue they may not have anticipated: Confusion, by both journalists and police, over which credentials were acceptable where.

NYPD said police credentials were recognized but never required. The agency said any current credentials of a working reporter were recognized during the convention, and police acted quickly to release reporters who were mistakenly detained.

But Daniel Cashin, a cameraman for Democracy Now and DCTV New York, was detained for more than an hour at a temporary holding area at Grand Central Station, even though he had Convention credentials on him. And AP photo runner Jeannette Warner was held for 12 hours.

A photographer with her was released after showing NYPD credentials.

Freelance photojournalist Geoffrey O’Connor did not have his credentials with him when he was detained while filming a protest. He was released after he received the proper documents, but a police officer threatened to arrest him and revoke his credentials when he resumed filming.

RNC credentials were clearly not enough if the journalists were part of a mass street arrest.

“If you go to where people are protesting and don’t want to be a part of the protest, you’re always going to run the risk that maybe you’ll get tied up with it.” Mayor Bloomberg said on WABC when asked about the numerous arrests of innocent bystanders and journalists.

At least three journalists were hauled in to Pier 57 where a temporary intake center was set up — and dubbed “Guantanamo on the Hudson.” The former bus depot served as a holding cell with 40 people to each chain-link pen.

Police said protestors typically waited about 90 minutes while being searched and interviewed before being taken to a booking facility where they were either ticketed and released or held for a court appearance.

Yet, at least one journalist, Kelley Benjamin with a Tampa, Fla. weekly, was held for more than 24 hours.

The 2004 Democratic Convention in Boston was held one month earlier in Boston with no reports of journalist detainments or arrests, though critics assailed the designated “Free Speech Zone” for protestors — including chain link fencing, razor wire barricades and police dog patrols.

The 2000 conventions

The 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles brought back bitter reminders of the notorious Chicago Convention in 1968: police reverted to pepper spray, baton assault and rubber bullets to control demonstrators.

Journalists working among the protestors, trying to cover an increasingly volatile situation from every angle, did not expect to be treated as targets.

Photographer Stefan Zacklin of U.S. News and World Report was snapping pictures of police arresting a group of demonstrators when he was ordered to the ground and handcuffed. Police were preparing to release him, realizing he was a journalist, when he quipped that they’d stopped him from doing his job. Off to the police station he went.

Reports surfaced that journalists were mocked for asserting their First Amendment rights to cover the scene. The situation grew dangerous — several journalists were hospitalized with bruised ribs and a cracked shoulder blade after covering one of the most turbulent protests of the Convention. They’d been wearing brightly colored media passes, and they claimed the police pursued them to stop them from covering the demonstration.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed suit on behalf of seven reporters alleging that no protestors were between the reporters and the officers firing rubber bullets.

The case (Crespo v. Los Angeles) resulted with Los Angeles police officials agreeing to pay $60,000 to the journalists and to implement a new policy within the police department recognizing that the media has the right to cover public meetings, whether they are legal assemblies or not.

The Philadelphia Republican Convention was not nearly as violent, but two reporters were arrested despite carrying the proper media passes.

Reporters Committee Convention Hotlines

Every four years since the 1972 conventions, the Reporters Committee has operated special convention hotlines for reporters who face legal hurdles, arrest or detention while covering the conventions or the protests surrounding them.

For the Democratic National Convention in Denver, the hotline will be staffed by attorneys with the law firm of Levine, Sullivan, Koch & Schulz LLP.

During the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, attorneys Paul Hannah of Kelly & Berens and Bill Tilton and George Dunn of Tilton & Dunn.

The Reporters Committee’s regular legal defense hotline will also be available during the conventions. Calls with convention arrest problems will be directed to the lawyers in the convention cities.

More from Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press | Top of Page


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2004 Republican National Convention in NY, 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Harassment of Glass Bead Collective journalists (night of Aug 26th/early morning of Aug 27th), Critical Mass Bike Ride at Loring Park (Aug 29th), Raid on Convergence Center at 627 Smith Ave S, St. Paul, MN (Aug 29th), Raid on 951 Iglehart Ave, St. Paul, MN where i-Witness Video were staying (Aug 30th), Raid on 2301 23rd Ave South, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th) Food Not Bombs home. Nathanael David Secor arrested, Raid on 3500 Harriet Avenue, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th), Raid on 3240 17th Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th) - Garrett Scott Fitzgerald, Eryn Chase Trimmer, Monica Rachel Bicking arrested, Liberty Parade on Nicollet Mall (Aug 31st), Vets for Peace Solumn Funeral Procession (Aug 31st), March on the RNC to Stop the War (Sep 1st), Vandalism in downtown St. Paul (Sept 1st), Democracy Now staff arrests (Sep 1st), Mass Arrest of Harriet Island "Take Back Labor Day" concert-goers on Shepard Road (Sep 1st), Ripple Effect Concert at the State Capitol (Sep 2nd), Mears Park Poor People's Rally & March for Our Lives (Sept 2nd), Near-raid on i-Witness Video space at 1595 Selby Ave (Sep 3rd), Mass arrest of Rage Against The Machine concert goers in Minneapolis (Sept 3rd), Student Strike Against the RNC (Sep 4th), "No Peace for the Warmakers" Rally & Demonstration (Sep 4th), Mass arrest on Marion St Bridge (Sept 4th), Community Conversation about the RNC (Sep 24th), RNC Public Review Safety Commission public hearing (Nov 6th), G-20 Protests in London (March-April 2009), G-20 protests in Pittsburgh (24-25 September 2009), RNC 8 evidentiary hearings (May 2010)

Key People
BOSTROM, Matt (Assistant Police Chief of St. Paul), CHOI, John (St. Paul City Attorney), COLEMAN, Christopher B. (St. Paul Mayor), DARBY, Brandon (A.K.A. "CHS 1", paid informant who infiltrated Austin protesters), DARST, Andrew (A.K.A. "Panda", "CRI 2", paid informant who infiltrated RNC Welcoming Committee), DEPALMA, Matthew (Michigan Molotov Case), DOLAN, Tim (Minneapolis Police Chief), FLETCHER, Bob (Ramsey County Sheriff), GAERTNER, Susan (Ramsey County Attorney), GOODMAN, Amy (Democracy Now, arrested Sept 1st), GROSS, Michelle (Communities United Against Police Brutality), HARRINGTON, John (St. Paul Police Chief), HEFFELFINGER, Tom (Former U.S. Attorney) and LUGER, Andy (former Assistant U.S. Attorney), HUGHES, Elliot (alleged torture under Ramsey County Sheriff's care), JOHNSON, Jason (Tased in Mears Park on Day 2), KELLY, Mick (Banner carrier shot with projectile at point blank on Day 4/Arrested for distributing leaflets about RNC march at Obama rally), LANE, Leah (abusive arrest on Day 4 captured on CNN and Fox 9), LUBINSKI, Sharon (Assistant Police Chief of Minneapolis), MAHONEY, Dave (Accused of dropping sandbag onto I-94 freeway on Day 1), MULHOLLAND, Ann (St. Paul Deputy Mayor), NESTOR, Bruce (President of National Lawyers Guild, Minnesota Chapter), PAWLENTY, Tim (Governor of Minnesota), ROWLEY, Coleen (retired FBI 9/11 whistle-blower and peace activist), "RNC 8" Arrestees (Monica BICKING, Robert CZERNIK, Garrett FITZGERALD, Luce Guillen GIVINS, Erik OSELAND, Nathanael SECOR, Max SPECTOR, and Eryn TRIMMER), RYBACK, R.T. (Minneapolis Mayor), SMITH, Keith (17-year-old protester allegedly beaten by police on Day 1), SUNDIN, Jess (March on the RNC organizer, Anti-War Committee), "TEXAS TWO" Arrestees (Bradley Neal CROWDER and David MCKAY), THUNE, Dave (Ward 2 Council Member for St. Paul)


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Important RNC Links
Coldsnap Legal Collective | Communities United Against Police Brutality (CUAPB) | Community RNC Arrestee Support Structure (CRASS) | Friends of the RNC 8 | Glass Bead Collective | Ground Noise and Static documentary | Help Dave Mahoney | The Milwalkee Three | National Lawyers Guild (Minneapolis) | RNC Commission Report & Executive Summary | Support the Texas Two | Terrorizing Dissent documentary | Twin Cities Indymedia
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