logo
ICE-detained journalist bonds out after arrest while reporting on 'No Kings' protests

ICE-detained journalist bonds out after arrest while reporting on 'No Kings' protests

NBC Newsa day ago
A press freedom group applauded the release of journalist Mario Guevara from immigration detention, but continued to raise concerns that the government considers his coverage of a "No Kings" protest last month to be dangerous.
Guevara was released Tuesday from detention in Georgia, following an arrest that generated quick backlash from press freedom and civil rights groups. He was arrested by local officers, turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for detention, and was placed in deportation proceedings.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, which was among groups to protest Guevara's arrest and detention, said in a statement it is "concerned by the government lawyer's argument that livestreaming presented a danger to the public by compromising the integrity and safety of law enforcement activities."
"The fact that Guevara was arrested while exercising his First Amendment rights as a journalist and was subsequently held for over two weeks by various law enforcement bodies sends an alarming message to the media and has effectively silenced Guevara's coverage of his community," said Katherine Jacobsen, U.S., Canada and Caribbean program coordinator at CPJ.
Guevara's attorney has said his client entered the country legally on a tourist visa, has permission to work in the U.S. and has a pending legal permanent residency application.
Guevara, an award-winning journalist, reports regularly on ICE and other police and crime news. His Facebook posts show video of ICE activity, but also coverage of community, crime, culture, news from El Salvador and soccer.
His work and wide influence in the Atlanta area Latino community was the feature of a short documentary by the New York Times. He has been covering immigration raids in the Atlanta area since 2017, according to The New Yorker.
NBC News reached out to Guevara's attorney and to Guevara through his Facebook page but have not received an immediate response.
Guevara was arrested June 14, while covering a protest in an Atlanta suburb. Body camera video showed he stepped from a curb into the street as an officer with a shield advanced toward him. Officers can be heard on the video saying he'd been warned multiple times to stay out of the street.
Guevara was charged with three misdemeanors: improperly entering a roadway, obstruction of law enforcement officers, and unlawful assembly.
Those charges were dismissed after the DeKalb County solicitor general said video evidence showed Guevara "generally in compliance" and didn't show an intent to disregard law enforcement directives."
DeKalb County authorities turned him over to ICE, which put a detainer on him.
Despite the solicitor general's findings on the misdemeanors and their dismissal, Tricia McLaughlin, a Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary, said in a statement Wednesday that Guevara had obstructed Georgia police and did not comply with their orders to move out of the street. She said Guevara has been placed in removal proceedings.
McLaughlin also said Guevara had entered the country illegally in 2004, which is in conflict with his attorney's statement that he entered on a visa.
Authorities filed additional charges against Guevara related to a May 20 stop — a month prior — when he was livestreaming while driving the actions of an immigration officer. An initial incident report states those charges were reported June 17, but the report gives no details and the names of the two deputies involved were redacted, .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say
Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say

North Wales Chronicle

time24 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say

Police in Straubing said the attack happened on an ICE express train headed to the Austrian capital, Vienna, while it was between Straubing and Plattling in the southern state of Bavaria. About 500 people were on board when the attack happened, police said. About 150 police officers, firefighters and emergency personnel were deployed to the scene, police added. The railway line was closed down. Police initially said the perpetrator used an axe in the attack but later said he allegedly used a hammer and most likely other weapons which they did not name. They identified the man as a 20-year-old Syrian national. Police did not provide further details on the identity of the attacker or his motive, but later said that he was overpowered by fellow passengers and had also been injured. The perpetrator 'is probably somewhat more seriously injured', a police spokesperson told German news agency dpa. He was in police custody and receiving medical treatment. The four injured passengers, who were not identified, were taken to nearby hospitals. According to the Bavarian Red Cross, the emergency services were alerted at around 2pm local time on Thursday, after passengers pulled the emergency brakes. The Red Cross said a special care centre was set up nearby to take care of passengers. In addition to numerous rescue services and two helicopters, psychological caregivers were deployed to help those who were not injured but might have been traumatised. German rail operator Deutsche Bahn said in a statement that 'our thoughts and sympathy are with the injured and all those who now have to come to terms with what they have experienced', and thanked the emergency services for the quick arrest of the suspect.

Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say
Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say

Glasgow Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Four people injured in hammer attack on German train, police say

Police in Straubing said the attack happened on an ICE express train headed to the Austrian capital, Vienna, while it was between Straubing and Plattling in the southern state of Bavaria. About 500 people were on board when the attack happened, police said. About 150 police officers, firefighters and emergency personnel were deployed to the scene, police added. The railway line was closed down. Police initially said the perpetrator used an axe in the attack but later said he allegedly used a hammer and most likely other weapons which they did not name. They identified the man as a 20-year-old Syrian national. Police did not provide further details on the identity of the attacker or his motive, but later said that he was overpowered by fellow passengers and had also been injured. The perpetrator 'is probably somewhat more seriously injured', a police spokesperson told German news agency dpa. He was in police custody and receiving medical treatment. The four injured passengers, who were not identified, were taken to nearby hospitals. According to the Bavarian Red Cross, the emergency services were alerted at around 2pm local time on Thursday, after passengers pulled the emergency brakes. The Red Cross said a special care centre was set up nearby to take care of passengers. In addition to numerous rescue services and two helicopters, psychological caregivers were deployed to help those who were not injured but might have been traumatised. German rail operator Deutsche Bahn said in a statement that 'our thoughts and sympathy are with the injured and all those who now have to come to terms with what they have experienced', and thanked the emergency services for the quick arrest of the suspect.

First immigration detainees arrive at Florida center in the Everglades
First immigration detainees arrive at Florida center in the Everglades

The Independent

time27 minutes ago

  • The Independent

First immigration detainees arrive at Florida center in the Everglades

The first group of immigrants has arrived at a new detention center deep in the Florida Everglades that officials have dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz,' a spokesperson for Republican state Attorney General James Uthmeier told The Associated Press. ' People are there,' Press Secretary Jae Williams said, though he didn't immediately provide further details on the number of detainees or when they arrived. 'Next stop: back to where they came from,' Uthmeier said on the X social media platform Wednesday. He's been credited as the architect behind the Everglades proposal. Requests for additional information from the office of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Division of Emergency Management, which is building the site, had not been returned early Thursday afternoon. The facility, at an airport used for training, will have an initial capacity of about 3,000 detainees, DeSantis said. The center was built in eight days and features more than 200 security cameras, 28,000-plus feet (8,500 meters) of barbed wire and 400 security personnel. Immigrants who are arrested by Florida law enforcement officers under the federal government's 287(g) program will be taken to the facility, according to a Trump administration official. The program is led by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and allows police officers to interrogate immigrants in their custody and detain them for potential deportation. The facility is expected to be expanded in 500 bed increments until it has an estimated 5,000 beds by early July. Environmental groups and Native American tribes have protested against the center, contending it is a threat to the fragile Everglades system, would be cruel to detainees because of heat and mosquitoes, and is on land the tribes consider sacred. It's also located at a place prone to frequent heavy rains, which caused some flooding in the tents Tuesday during a visit by President Donald Trump to mark its opening. State officials say the complex can withstand a Category 2 hurricane, which packs winds of between 96 and 110 mph (154 and 177 kph), and that contractors worked overnight to shore up areas where flooding occurred. DeSantis and other state officials say locating the facility in the rugged and remote Florida Everglades is meant as a deterrent — and naming it after the notorious federal prison of Alcatraz, an island fortress known for its brutal conditions, is meant to send a message. It's another sign of how the Trump administration and its allies are relying on scare tactics to try to persuade people in the country illegally to leave voluntarily. State and federal officials have touted the plans on social media and conservative airwaves, sharing a meme of a compound ringed with barbed wire and 'guarded' by alligators wearing hats labeled 'ICE' for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Republican Party of Florida has taken to fundraising off the detention center, selling branded T-shirts and beer koozies emblazoned with the facility's name. _____

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store