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50+ news organizations to Philadelphia public officials: Protect journalists

This Free Press letter asks Mayor Jim Kenney, City Council and Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw to "immediately end the practice of arresting journalists and protesters expressing their First Amendment rights."

A Center City protestor puts his fist in the air, May 30, 2020. (Photo by Bretton Long for Technical.ly)

Editor’s note: The following letter was drafted by Free Press, signed by 51 news organizations — both local and nationally focused — and delivered to Mayor Jim Kenney, Philadelphia City Council and Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw on Friday morning. Technical.ly and sister site Generocity both signed it. It is reprinted here with permission.


June 5, 2020

Dear Mayor Kenney, Commissioner Outlaw and the Philadelphia City Council:

Over the course of several days, we have witnessed and documented multiple instances of police violence. This has included unlawful arrests of journalists and protesters who are documenting the civic demonstrations within Philadelphia.

We, the collective media of Philadelphia, representing digital, broadcast and print journalists, join with national press-freedom, civil-rights and social-justice groups to ask you to acknowledge these unprovoked acts of violence and denounce the tactics police have used that suppress and infringe upon our constitutional rights and protections under the First Amendment.

Since these protests began:

  • A WHYY reporter was arrested for covering a protest in Center City.
  • A Pulitzer Prize-winning Philadelphia Inquirer reporter was arrested for walking to her car after curfew despite the press exemption and protection within the city’s COVID-19 and curfew orders.
  • An independent journalist was shot by rubber bullets while lawfully recording on public property.

After her arrest, Kristen Graham, a veteran Inquirer journalist who won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, said, “I am a born and bred Philadelphian, an Inquirer journalist for the past two decades. … I’ve never experienced anything quite like what I saw Monday. I’m still not sure how to explain it to my children.”

These instances of violence speak to a troubling national trend of police violence toward the press, from the unlawful arrest of CNN reporter Omar Jimenez in Minneapolis to the police attack on Australian journalists in Washington, D.C.

There is stress in our communities stemming from decades of systemic oppression and silence from elected leaders. The challenges that arise for law enforcement when Philadelphia residents assert their right to assemble in no way justifies police violence toward the press and others who enact their protected rights to document and record these protests.

Our laws give us protection to report and document what is happening in our city and across the country. Our laws give us the right to talk to the public, hold police accountable for their actions and ask questions that shed light and give context that inform the public.

As elected leaders, you are sworn to uphold our rights. We, the undersigned, call on you to do the following:

  • Immediately end the practice of arresting journalists and protesters expressing their First Amendment rights, including freedom of speech, freedom of the press and freedom to peacefully assemble. [Editor’s note: On Tuesday, Outlaw publicly instructed officers “to allow reporters to do their jobs ‘unless extenuating circumstances exist,'” WHYY reported.]
  • Immediately release anyone who’s been detained for exercising those protected rights and drop any related charges.
  • Immediately release any newsgathering materials taken from journalists and protesters, and cease pressuring journalists to hand over newsgathering materials and footage.
  • Issue a public statement affirming these First Amendment rights and assert that members of the press and the public have a right to record police activity and public protests.
  • Publicly commit to transparency in all interactions with the press; this includes publicizing arrests, residents detained and charges issued.
  • Publicly reinforce the fact that police officers and members of the National Guard do not have the right to unlawfully arrest and detain members of the press or protesters who are recording or otherwise documenting demonstrations within the city.

Signed,

Free Press

Movement Alliance Project

Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists

  • ACLU of Pennsylvania
  • Asian American Journalists Association — Philadelphia Bonfire Media Collective
  • Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism
  • Common Cause
  • Common Cause Pennsylvania
  • Doc Society / Good Pitch Local Philly
  • Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)
  • Freedom of the Press Foundation
  • G-Town Radio
  • Generocity
  • Germantown Info Hub
  • Globalvision
  • Government Accountability Project
  • Green Philly
  • Independence Public Media Foundation
  • Kensington Voice
  • KYW News Radio
  • Media Alliance
  • Media in the Public Interest
  • Media, Inequality & Change Center
  • National Association of Hispanic Journalists – Philadelphia
  • National Coalition Against Censorship
  • National Press Photographers Association
  • The NewsGuild
  • The NewsGuild of New York
  • Online News Association
  • Open Media Foundation
  • PEN America
  • Philadelphia Citizen
  • Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Philadelphia Local | SAG-AFTRA
  • Philadelphia Neighborhoods
  • Philadelphia Weekly
  • PhillyCAM
  • Philly Your Black News
  • Public News Service/Keystone State News Connection
  • Reporters Without Borders USA
  • Society of Professional Journalists
  • Student Press Law Center
  • Technical.ly
  • The Temple News
  • Temple University Television Station
  • Temple Update
  • Thomas Jefferson University Communication Program
  • Tully Center for Free Speech
  • WHIP Radio
  • WHYY
  • Writers Guild of America, East
Companies: Philadelphia City Council / Generocity / Philadelphia Police Department / Technical.ly
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