CPJ Safety Advisory: Covering U.S. protests over police violence

US protests safety advisory

A police officer sprays protesters during a march against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in New York City, on May 30, 2020. (Reuters/Jeenah Moon)

Updated August 26, 2020

There have been hundreds of reported incidents of violence and harassment, as well as arrests, targeting journalists covering ongoing Black Lives Matter protests across the U.S. sparked by the death on May 25, 2020—in police custody—of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man in Minneapolis, Minnesota. These incidents have been documented by CPJ and the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, a nonpartisan website of which CPJ is a founding partner, as well as by news reports and video and photos on live television and posted on social media. While police appear to be responsible for the majority of reported incidents, journalists should be aware that crowds and protesters have also targeted reporters.

Journalists who need legal assistance can call the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press hotline at 1-800-336-4243 or contact the Reporters Committee via email at hotline@rcfp.org. For more legal information, journalists can consult the Reporters Committee’s guide to covering protests and tip sheet.

Journalists covering the protests should consider the following risks:

Journalists covering the protests should consider and be aware of the following:

Physical Safety

Digital Safety

CPJ’s online Safety Kit provides journalists and newsrooms with basic safety information on physical, digital, and psychological safety resources and tools, including covering civil unrest. If you need assistance, journalists should contact CPJ via emergencies@cpj.org

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