Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were all criminally trespassing on private property and were asked to leave repeatedly and refused. The right to protest does not extend to trespassing.
This ^^. Funny how the OP neglected to mention all the facts in her pursuit of outrage.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good
Yes soon the US will be like Israel.
Anonymous wrote:Good.
Anonymous wrote:They were all criminally trespassing on private property and were asked to leave repeatedly and refused. The right to protest does not extend to trespassing.
Anonymous wrote:Something tells me that that officer is going to be in trouble for a violation of the Amendment to the Constitution. I'm sure that the TV studio that employs that reporter is going to be having words or legal actions against the police department over this. The police officer can ask her to leave the premises, but cannot arrest her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good.
Arresting reporters is never good. Are even American??????
Anonymous wrote:Good
Anonymous wrote:Good.
More than two dozen people were detained Thursday at a pro-Palestinian demonstration outside a Raytheon office in Arizona, including a local reporter who was covering the event. The Arizona Republic reports that KJZZ's Alisa Reznick was arrested by a deputy from the Pima County Sheriff's Department outside a University of Arizona satellite campus that houses the defense contractor, despite the fact that she sported clearly visible media credentials, carried reporting gear, and informed the arresting officer that she was a journalist. "I'm a reporter," Reznick can be heard telling the deputy in a video of the incident posted to YouTube, per the Tucson Sentinel, to which he replies: "You're under arrest."