Joint Journalist Coalition Demand Letter

 
2018-NABJLA-logo_wide_blk_BEVEL_transp.png
 

April 20, 2021

To Police Chief Moore, Sheriff Villanueva, Los Angeles County Board  of Supervisors, Los Angeles City Council, Mayor Garcetti and  Southern California Law Enforcement:  

Los Angeles and other major cities have seen a resurgence in protests  against police brutality over the past year, which have resulted in a series  of incidents involving police officers and the journalists assigned to cover  those demonstrations. 

Journalists in Southern California and elsewhere have been detained,  tackled, sprayed with tear gas, hit with rubber bullets and arrested,  preventing them from providing the public with urgently needed information  and putting their health and safety at great risk. 

Law enforcement officers, and government agencies more broadly, must  not interfere with journalists as they work to provide accurate information  on these protests and law enforcement’s response to them. 

Now, a cross section of Southern California journalism organizations has  come together to demand that you take new steps to safeguard that work. 

We demand that you: 

End the practice of detaining and arresting journalists who are  covering events in areas where officers have issued a dispersal order  or declared an unlawful assembly. Journalists must be able to  witness and report on what happens during these important police  actions.

Agree to ensure media have “sight and sound” access to any major event.

  • Ensure that media credentials are not required for news outlets,  freelancers or student journalists to cover demonstrations.

  • Impress upon frontline supervisors that individuals who self-identify  as journalists while acting in a news gathering capacity must be  afforded full access.

  • Recognize that newsgathering is squarely protected by the First  Amendment, with courts around the country finding that laws  requiring journalists actively engaged in newsgathering to disperse  raise serious constitutional concerns.

  • Understand that journalists play a vital role as surrogates for the  public in witnessing the way police effectuate dispersal orders.    

Finally, our organization leaders are requesting a face-to-face meeting to  discuss these issues. We are confident that these issues can be resolved  and the First Amendment freedoms can be safeguarded in Southern  California. 

Sincerely, 

Asian American Journalists Association

Los Angeles Society of Professional Journalists,

Los Angeles National Association of Hispanic Journalists board of directors

National Association of Hispanic Journalists

Los Angeles National Association of Black Journalists of Los Angeles

Latino Journalists of California, CCNMA 

Los Angeles Press Club 

Media Guild of the West, NewsGuild-CWA Local 39213