[Updated] St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman’s office issued a statement this morning announcing that the city attorney won’t prosecute journalists who were cited by authorities at the Republican National Convention (RNC) with “presence at an unlawful assembly,” a misdemeanor charge.
That pertains specifically to the journalists who were swept up in the massive arrests during protests in St. Paul on the convention’s first and last days (including MnIndy’s Paul Demko, who was arrested on the last night of the RNC).
How many people that might include hasn’t been tallied yet, but nearly 50 of the more than 800 people arrested or detained were onsite to cover the RNC, according to a MnIndy analysis (see comments for additions to our original list). Their cases will be individually reviewed according to this policy, according to City Attorney John Choi.
In other news related to RNC journalist arrestees, it should be noted that the pending charges against “Democracy Now!” host Amy Goodman and two of her producers are being dropped. Choi explained that his office is declining prosecution in Goodman’s case, “because the facts and circumstances related to Amy Goodman fell outside of our charging policy for obstruction of legal process cases,” which is what she was cited for.
Choi explained that, “In conjunction with the police department and community activists, the City Attorney’s Office has developed a more conservative approach to handling obstruction of legal process cases. We felt that same policy should apply to this case.”
Further, after reviewing the facts, circumstances and video evidence, pending unlawful assembly charges against the show’s two producers are also being cleared.
Choi said the decision doesn’t necessarily mean the arrests were improper. “What defines probable cause for an arrest is different from what defines probable cause for a charge. … We have to look at whether we can succeed at court,” he said.
Minneapolis attorney John Lundquist, who represented Goodman on the matter, said, “Obviously we’re very happy that [the city attorney] made the right call in declining the charges. It was a little slow in coming, but I agree that it was correct to dismiss it. Clearly there was never any prosecutable case.” Further, “I strongly disagree there was ever any probable cause for the arrests in the first place.”
Mayor Coleman said in the prepared statement about the policy decision made concerning journalists at the RNC, “This decision reflects the values we have in St. Paul to protect and promote our First Amendment rights to freedom of the press. … A journalist plays a special role in our democracy and that role is just too important to ignore.” While police carried out their charge to protect public safety, “we are serving the public’s interest to maintain the integrity of our democracy, system of justice and freedom of the press.”
The statement acknowledges the “growing media profession in print, broadcast and the Internet, the city attorney’s office will use a broad definition and verification to identify journalists who were caught up in mass arrests during the convention.”












8 Comments »
Comment posted September 19, 2008 @ 12:17 pm
Dear Mayor Coleman,
Please consider extending First Amendment rights to regular citizens, as well. Because, you know, citizens themselves sometimes play “a special role in our democracy”, too.
Thx.
Comment posted September 19, 2008 @ 2:35 pm
How touching that the St. Paul High Command has now droped charges on illegally arrested and detained journalists. Now what about the well-documented cases of police brutality and torture? Slim chance these crimes will ever be charged.
Comment posted September 19, 2008 @ 9:23 pm
I Wonder why as the chief law enforcement officer for Ramsey County, Sheriff Bob Fletcher allowed Blackwater contractors to unlawfully round up people peacefully sitting in a public park, and why St Paul’s Police Chief John Harrington also allowed it?I also wonder why nobody has asked the question, “Why were Blackwater Contractors used against peaceful protestors? And Why was their presence never questioned by the media?”
– Anony Moose
Comment posted September 20, 2008 @ 9:52 pm
Hopefully the illegaly arrested individuals will exercise their rights under the law and SUE THE POLICE AND THE CITY!!!!Of course the taxpayer will be left holding the bag as the individual perpetrators are immune from personal liability.The whole thing appears to be an attempt to intimidate people and to prevent them from exercising their constitutional rights!!!!
Comment posted September 21, 2008 @ 7:33 pm
Here’s a question for Anna Pratt: Why did anarchists and hard core leftists attempt to abrogate the political rights of American citizens who are Republicans?
Comment posted September 22, 2008 @ 10:59 am
Nachman,
For the same reason that colonists dumped British tea into Boston harbor in 1773. Except this time it wasn’t the Townshend Act, it was the Iraq war.
Comment posted September 22, 2008 @ 1:24 pm
Amy Goodman says:
“There needs to be a full investigation of law enforcement activities during the convention.”
So how bout it Democracy Now! ? Who better to take the lead in a counter-suit?
Comment posted September 22, 2008 @ 1:32 pm
The b@stards are too ch!cken-sh!t to prosecute ‘cos they know these are bogus charges by an out of control authoritarian police force.
Sue, sue, sue the SOBs.
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