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A journalist known for covering immigration is arrested by ICE

LEILA FADEL, HOST:

Mario Guevara, a journalist from El Salvador, has lived in the U.S. for 20 years. He reports on immigrant communities in Georgia for Spanish-language media outlets. He was even the subject of a 2019 New York Times documentary.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED OFFICER: Turn off the camera.

MARIO GUEVARA: Officer - you can't do that, officer.

UNIDENTIFIED OFFICER: So you're not here for any lawful purposes.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: You're impeding our investigation. You do...

FADEL: Earlier this month, Guevara was arrested while reporting on an anti-Trump protest in Atlanta. He was then transferred to immigration authorities and remains in detention. The Committee to Protect Journalists is expressing alarm. I asked Katherine Jacobsen - CPJ's U.S., Canada and Caribbean program coordinator - why.

KATHERINE JACOBSEN: Guevara was covering the No Kings protests against the Trump administration. He was wearing a press vest that clearly stated press on it and was livestreaming the event. At the time of his detention, he was trying to record the proceedings, and officers walked up to him and arrested him. I should also say, this is all available on body cam footage, which has since been released. So there's a very clear documentation about what happened.

FADEL: So what is the Committee to Protect Journalists' concern here? I mean, was he detained over his legal status, or was he detained because of his work?

JACOBSEN: Guevara was initially detained because he was recording a protest. There are misdemeanor charges against him. It's highly irregular that any of those charges would actually be held up, right? We've seen this in many other cases. And simply put, Guevara was doing his job and reporting the news. And to use that as a pretext to hold him - a journalist - for a very long period of time in law enforcement detention and then to transfer him to ICE detention after that is something that we haven't seen before and is an incredibly alarming precedent to set.

FADEL: What protections exist for immigrant journalists like Guevara and others who are doing their jobs in the United States?

JACOBSEN: Well, in theory, they enjoy the same First Amendment rights that a U.S. citizen, who is a reporter, enjoy while they're out covering things. In the U.S., there are hundreds of foreign reporters. Many of them have a specific type of journalist visa, but some have other types of work authorization. And when a journalist who, again, is here legally is picked up by law enforcement and then his immigration status is called into question in the course of these legal proceedings, it's alarming.

FADEL: So you sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security. What did you say in that letter? What were you asking for, and what did they say back?

JACOBSEN: We sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security asking that Guevara be released immediately and pointed out that the whole reason why he was detained in the first place was because of charges relating to First Amendment activity, and we find that very problematic. We have not received a response. The Department of Homeland Security has also tweeted that the narrative about Guevara is false. So they have not specified further as to what the falsehoods are.

FADEL: What would you say to other noncitizen journalists in the United States right now who have work authorization or visas to do their jobs, who may be afraid to cover sensitive issues or protests because of what they're seeing?

JACOBSEN: I think there is a great deal of reason for concern at this time, and it's important to make sure that those journalists have contact with a good immigration lawyer, as well as First Amendment lawyers, and have a clear understanding of their rights.

FADEL: Katherine Jacobsen is the U.S., Canada and Caribbean program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists. Thank you so much.

JACOBSEN: Thanks for having me.

FADEL: We reached out to the Department of Homeland Security. They also told us this narrative is false. In a statement, a department spokesperson said Guevara is in removal proceedings and urged him to, quote, "self-deport." They also said Guevara was arrested by local police and transferred to ICE custody because he entered the U.S. illegally in 2004. Guevara's lawyer says that's not true. He entered the country legally on a visa and that he has work authorization. The lawyer says his immigration status had been pending. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Leila Fadel is a national correspondent for NPR based in Los Angeles, covering issues of culture, diversity, and race.