
Urban radio has a lot of relevant real time content to discuss when it comes to people of color. Independent journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort have vowed to continue reporting, following their arrests after covering an anti-ICE protest at a church in Minnesota. Lemon, a former CNN anchor, and Fort, a Minnesota reporter, were released from federal custody on Friday, following criticism from human rights advocates and journalism organizations over their arrests.
A federal grand jury in Minnesota indicted Fort and Lemon on charges related to the interruption of a religious service at the Cities Church in St. Paul, where a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement official is a pastor. Both Fort and Lemon have maintained that they were not participating in the protest at the church but were reporting on the incident as journalists.
Speaking during his YouTube show on Friday, Lemon said that this is a moment for journalists around the world “to stand up for each other.” “It may have started with people having their due process rights violated on the streets, violently violated on the streets. But now they’re trying to silence journalists. And I will not be silenced,” Lemon said on his show.
Fort, a Minnesota native who filmed her arrest as federal agents showed up to her home early Friday, told CNN’s Anderson Cooper shortly after her release that she will “continue to tell the stories of my community.” She also said the arrests have sent “a chilling message” to the media industry.
“As journalists, we never want to be the story. But unfortunately, I did find myself in a predicament where I felt that I needed to be able to tell my own story, that I needed the world to see that journalism is on trial,” Fort said on Anderson Cooper 360°.
She added: “If they can criminalize a journalist here in Minnesota, whether you’re independent or not, I think that we’ve seen a track record where this is just going to continue to escalate.”

You must be logged in to post a comment.