Award-winning journalist and the host of Democracy Now, Amy Goodman, has
been facing an outrageous arrest warrant in North Dakota for “criminal trespass”
since early September—the result of her merely doing her job as a reporter and
covering police violence against oil pipeline protesters in North Dakota.
Today, she
announced she would return to the state in order to turn herself in and
contest the charges on Monday.
“I will go back to North Dakota to fight this
charge,” she said. “It is a clear violation of the First Amendment,” said
Goodman. “I was doing my job as a journalist, covering a violent attack on
Native American protesters.”
It couldn’t be more obvious that Ms. Goodman is being
charged solely for her journalism and the impact it had on the oil pipeline
debate. Here’s how
Democracy Now described its news coverage that led to the charges
against Ms. Goodman:
On Saturday, September 3, Democracy Now! filmed
security guards working for the pipeline company attacking protesters. The
report showed guards unleashing dogs and using pepper spray and featured people
with bite injuries and a dog with blood on its mouth and nose.
Democracy Now!’s report went viral online, was viewed
more than 14 million times on Facebook and was rebroadcast on many outlets,
including CBS, NBC, NPR, CNN, MSNBCand the Huffington Post.
Rolling Stone’s Matt Tiabbi detailed
what happened as a result of the segment Democracy Now aired:
Shortly thereafter, the Obama administration
intervened, stopping pipeline construction on Army Corps land and asking the
company to “voluntarily
pause all construction activity“ in the area.
This victory for the Standing Rock Sioux would likely
not have been possible without the aggressive independent reporting of
Democracy Now!, whose pictures created significant public pressure.
Yet because, in the words of the prosecutor, “Everything she
reported on was from the position of justifying the protest actions,” she now
faces criminal charges. Read that sentence again. The state is literally
charging her for nothing else beyond exercising her rights as a journalist.
We fully support Ms. Goodman for taking
this incredibly brave stance and being willing to return North Dakota to fight
these charges directly, but make no mistake: North Dakota authorities should
have dropped these obviously illegal charges as soon as they were issued.
How North Dakota did not immediately realize this was
all a horrible mistake on their part is beyond reason. The only explanation
seems to be that they want to silence First Amendment-protected speech and
intimidate other journalists into not covering the protests. Since the charges
were issued a month ago, their actions have been universally condemned by press
freedom advocates, and there is simply no justification for letting it stand.
Not only are they flagrantly violating the
Constitution, they are giving every two bit dictator and corrupt police
establishment around the world every excuse to point to this episode and arrest
journalists abroad, while making a mockery of our own press freedom protections
at home.
Goodman is not a stranger to
unconstitutional actions by local police. She was arrested in Minnesota in 2008 for covering the
protests around the Republican National Convention. She later sued and won
$100,000 from the state for infringing her First Amendment rights.
We hope and expect similar accountability
for the authorities here when the dust clears. But in the meantime, North
Dakota should stop embarrassing itself and drop all charges against Amy
Goodman, and any other journalist who may be suffering the same fate,
immediately.
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