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ACLU wins settlement, reforms from Minnesota police following attacks on reporters

The Minnesota chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union reached a settlement with 🍌state police following attacks on journa๊lists covering protests of the George Floyd and Daunte Wright police killings.

Under the agreement, reporters that were injured by the Minneso�🅰�ta State Patrol were awarded a total of $825,000 and a federal judge approved a permanent injunction that prohibits state police from arresting, threatening or using physical force or chemical agents against journalists, ACLU-MN .

The court order, which is in effect for six years, also banned MSP from ordering journalists to disperse from the scene of a protest. State police were barred from seizing or damaging reporters’ recording devices, and would now be required to wear body cameras, the ACLU said.

In addition, troopers must now undergo training about the media’s First Amendment rights, and any allegations of free speech suppression would be considered “serious misconduct,” under the court order.

The settlement stemmed from a June 2020 lawsuit brought on behalf of journalists alleging mistreatment by state police and their law enforcement partners amid the widespread protests and riots that followed Floyd’s police murder in Minneapolis.

Minneapolis State Patrol arrest journalists and people protesting against racism and issues with the presidential election after they blocked interstate 94 in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 4, 2020.
Minnesota state police are now forbidden from seizing journalist’s recording equipment. AFP via Getty Images

Lead plaintiff Jared Goyette, a freelance reporter who was covering the protests for The Washington Post and The Guardian, was “shot in the face with less-lethal ballistic ammunition” by 🤪police on May 27, 2020, lawyers said.

Author Linda Tirado was blinded in one eye after being shot by police, according to the complaint. MSNBC’s Ali Velshi was also fired on by cops who told him they “don’t care” about his press status, the lawsuit claimed.

“I’ve been hit because I’ve been in the wrong place before. I’ve never been aimed at so deliberately so many times while I was avoiding it,” Reuters photographer Lucas Jackson said, according to the lawsuit.

Members of the State Patrol stand guard at the State Capitol during the sixth day of protests over the arrest of George Floyd, who later died in police custody, in St Paul, Minnesota
Several journalists have accused state guards of shooting them and ignoring their press credentials. CRAIG LASSIG/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Lawyers repres🐲en🎐ting the plaintiffs said the settlement was a crucial victory to protect the constitutional rights of the press.

“The Court’s ওground-breaking injunction will hold state law enforcement accountable and require them to respect the First Amendment, rather than use violence and threats that deter the media from covering protests and police conduct,” said ACLU-MN Legal Director Teresa Nelson.

“We need a freꦕe press to help us hold the police and government accountable. Without a free press, we don’t have a free society, and we can’t have justice.”

Injured Canadian video journalist Ed Ou celebrated the judgment, saying that the actions of Minnesota police empowered “authoritarian governments in other parts of the world” to “act with impunity.”

“I hope this case sets the precedent that any assault of a journalist is one too many,” Ou said.

Minnesota State Patrol off🐽icials did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Post.

The settlement was reached by Fredrikson & Byron, the Law Office of Kevin Riach, and A🦹pollo Law LLC on behalf of the injured journalists and medi🌌a labor union Communications Workers of America.

With AP wires