Federal Immigration Agents Under Fire for Arresting Journalists Filming Them
US Senators Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin have written to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, demanding an immediate halt to the arrest of individuals filming federal immigration agents. The lawmakers claim that such arrests are a form of suppression of free speech and undermine government accountability.
In their letter, the senators emphasized that exercising one's First Amendment right to record public figures is protected activity, not a danger to those being recorded. They pointed out that DHS deploys cameras and film crews for surveillance purposes in various operations around Chicago, including along the city river and during military-style raids.
Recounting the case of Steve Held, a Chicago journalist arrested during a protest at an ICE processing facility last month, Duckworth and Durbin denounced the notion that filming agents is inherently threatening to their safety. They argued that if such activity posed a risk, DHS would not be spending taxpayer dollars on camera crews to record and publish footage.
The senators' letter comes as they continue to push for transparency on various government initiatives, including the use of National Guard troops deployed around the country without public disclosure or congressional justification.
US Senators Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin have written to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, demanding an immediate halt to the arrest of individuals filming federal immigration agents. The lawmakers claim that such arrests are a form of suppression of free speech and undermine government accountability.
In their letter, the senators emphasized that exercising one's First Amendment right to record public figures is protected activity, not a danger to those being recorded. They pointed out that DHS deploys cameras and film crews for surveillance purposes in various operations around Chicago, including along the city river and during military-style raids.
Recounting the case of Steve Held, a Chicago journalist arrested during a protest at an ICE processing facility last month, Duckworth and Durbin denounced the notion that filming agents is inherently threatening to their safety. They argued that if such activity posed a risk, DHS would not be spending taxpayer dollars on camera crews to record and publish footage.
The senators' letter comes as they continue to push for transparency on various government initiatives, including the use of National Guard troops deployed around the country without public disclosure or congressional justification.