Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray
WASHINGTON — Press passes and television cameras, once powerful emblems of neutral non-combatants, are proving no defence for journalists covering the widespread public unrest in the United States.
The Nieman Journalism Lab, an offshoot of a fellowship program at Harvard University, catalogued more than 110 attacks on American journalists in just the first four days of the protests.
Social media platforms have been littered with images of police targeting reporters directly.
One widely shared image from Monday shows riot police using their shields and fists to lash out at a crew with cameras and microphones just outside the White House as they cleared a path through Lafayette Square for President Donald Trump.