Tag Archives: reporter

‘Loki’ Renewed for Season 2 at Disney+ – The Hollywood Reporter

Loki is the first of Marvel’s Disney+ scripted originals to score a formal renewal.

The comic book powerhouse used the mid-credits scene from Loki’s season finale Wednesday to formally announce that the Tom Hiddleston starrer would be back for a second season. No additional details were included beyond the title card with the news.

Loki is the third of Marvel’s scripted TV series to debut on Disney+. The first, WandaVision, ended with an episode that was labeled as a series finale. The Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany series also scored 23 Emmy nominations Tuesday — second overall, an impressive showing for Marvel’s first foray — in the limited series category. Olsen is set to next appear in Marvel’s upcoming Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (due in March).

Marvel’s second offering, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, is billed as an ongoing drama series (it collected five Emmy nominations in the category Tuesday). That series leads into the next Captain America movie as Marvel continues to move seamlessly between television and film as it connects the MCU to Disney+ originals.

That push continued Wednesday with the Loki finale. Without getting into spoilers (we’ll leave that to our Heat Vision colleagues), the Loki finale set the stage for Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Hiddleston’s Loki character is also expected to also appear in the next Dr. Strange. (Marvel has yet to confirm whether or not that’s happening.) The multiverse-busting finale also seems to have paved the way for the upcoming Spider-Man: Far From Home as it’s been rumored that Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield, along with former key villains played by Jamie Foxx (Electro) and Alfred Molina (Doctor Octopus), will appear in Marvel’s December release.

Marvel’s next Disney+ series will be the animated What If… (Aug. 11). Hawkeye is due in late 2021, with several other Marvel scripted originals (She-Hulk, Moon Knight, Iron Heart, Secret Invasion, Wakanda to name a few) also in various stages of development. For its part, Black Widow — which is available to stream on Disney+ and in theaters — also set up Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova to appear in Hawkeye.



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Gregg Popovich gets into heated exchange with reporter, Jayson Tatum’s move to bench and other takeaways from USA basketball’s loss to Australia

A look at some Team USA takeaways after the Americans dropped their second straight exhibition game 91-83 to Australia on Monday night in Las Vegas.

Gregg Popovich was not happy with a reporter’s line of questioning after the defeat

It’s only exhibition season but the Team USA head coach Gregg Popovich was not a fan of one reporter’s line of questioning on Monday night. He asked Damian Lillard about watching past USA Olympic teams dominate most other countries in past years, a far cry from the current team’s showing in the opening two exhibitions.

“It’s not the first time that I’ve seen Team USA be tested,” Lillard said. “Maybe not beat two times in a row, but I’ve seen it before. These other teams and these other countries just continue to improve. These players, they get better, they get more confident and they also want to beat us badly. It’s definitely noticeable when you’re on the court.”

However, Popovich decided he wasn’t going to let the question stand unchallenged. After Lillard finished his response, he decided to make a statement.

“Let me also answer that question,” Popovich declared. “You asked the same sort of question last time, you assume things that aren’t true.”

The reporter interrupted Popovich at this point, leading to a testy exchange between the pair.

“Are you gonna let me finish my statement or not?” Popovich repeated numerous times in the back and forth before the reporter relented. “So you’ll be quiet now while I talk. And then I’ll listen to you,”

“When you make statements about in the past, just blowing out these other teams … No. 1 you give no respect to the other teams. I talked to you last time about the same thing. We’ve had very close games against four or five countries in all these tournaments. So, the good teams do not get blown out. There are certain games it might happen in one of the tournaments, world championships and Olympics when somebody gets blown out but in general, nobody is blowing anybody out for the good teams. So, when you make a statement like that it’s like you assume that’s what’s going on and that’s incorrect.”

It’s clear Popovich did not want the blowout narrative to take hold by trying to take the reporter to task following a second straight defeat for USA Basketball. It’s rare to see such a heated exchange after an exhibition contest but it was a sign that Popovich wanted to defend his players from not living up to early expectations.

Jayson Tatum tries out a bench role

Jayson Tatum is one of the best players on Team USA Basketball. However, Gregg Popovich was searching for a bit of a different defensive look on Monday night on the heels of an ugly effort against Nigeria on Saturday.

He elected to send top talents Jayson Tatum and Bam Adebayo to the bench with Draymond Green and Jerami Grant inserted into the starting five, likely in an attempt to bring more of a versatile defensive edge to the starting five. Tatum’s offensive opportunities would also be more numerous with the second unit in theory with Damian Lillard, Bradley Beal and Kevin Durant all in the starting five.

Popovich’s plan worked well early as USA jumped out to a nine-point halftime lead but that momentum was unable to be sustained over 40 minutes.

“I thought we got better tonight,” said Popovich. “After a short time together, there’s a lot of things that have to be covered, but the first half and the second half were two different beasts.

“In the first half, we defended the way we wanted to defend. … We rebounded better. We moved the ball better at the offensive end and had more pace. In the second half, we tired out.”

Tatum was one of several players who struggled in the defeat, going just 4-of-12 from the field to score eight points. He added four assists and three rebounds over his 25 minutes in the reserve role. Whether Popovich sticks with Tatum coming off the bench will be an intriguing storyline to watch as the Olympics inch closer.

Patty Mills deserves a look from Boston this summer

With some of the best talents in the NBA suiting up for Team USA, it was an Australian point guard that ended up being the best player on the floor in crunch time on Monday night. Spurs guard Patty Mills finished with a game-high 22 points and a team-high four assists over his 30 minutes, helping Australia pull away with an 11-1 run over the final four minutes of the contest to seal the surprise win for the 16-point underdogs.

The 6-foot point guard is set to become an unrestricted free agent this summer after spending his entire career with the Spurs. His mix of speed and passing vision led to easy buckets against Americans with the game on the line as he took advantage of USA’s lack of cohesion.

That type of versatility should make Mills an attractive target to Boston and several other contenders around the league this summer. The Spurs may be going in a younger direction with their roster, which could force Mills to find a new home. He has played several seasons under new Celtics head coach Ime Udoka and that could work well for the Celtics if they make a run at him with their mid-level exception.

It’s clear Brad Stevens is in need of some added point guard depth this summer after dealing away Kemba Walker and Mills’ effort on Monday night was a reminder that he can make an impact against some of the best talent in the world.



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Obamas Readying Film and TV Event ‘Blackout’ for Netflix – The Hollywood Reporter

The Obamas’ Higher Ground and Fatherhood producers Temple Hill are re-teaming for a new project at Netflix.

The companies are developing Blackout, a film and TV “event” that is being adapted from six different love stories, each penned by a different writer. The project, Netflix notes, is being developed concurrently as a TV series and film adaptation. That means that some of the six stories could wind up in the film, while others are in the TV show. Sources caution that while this seems like a franchise in the making, it’s not a “multiverse” that will consist of multiple films and TV shows — at least not right now.

Blackout takes place in New York during a power outage on a hot summer night. It is told from the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love. The six writers attached to pen stories for the film and TV project are Dhonielle Clayton (Tiny Pretty Things), Tiffany D. Jackson (Allegedly), Nic Stone (Dear Martin), Angie Thomas (The Hate U Give), Ashley Woodfolk (The Beauty that Remains) and Nicola Yoon (Everything, Everything).

Temple Hill will exec produce the project, which marks as a reunion with Netflix and Higher Ground following Kevin Hart feature Fatherhood. Higher Ground, which has an overall deal with Netflix, teamed with the streamer to release the Sony Pictures film this year after the pandemic stalled its theatrical release. Temple Hill, founded by Wyck Godfrey and Marty Bowen, counts features Twilight, Maze Runner, The Fault in Our Stars, Happiest Season, First Man and TV’s The Outsider, Dave and Love, Victor among its credits.

Blackout becomes the Obamas’ latest project for Netflix, joining features American Factory, Becoming, Crip Camp, kids-focused entry Ada Twist and We the People, with several others in various stages of development. The Obamas inked a Netflix producing deal in May 2018. The former first couple set an expansive first slate of film and TV projects in April 2019.

Here’s how Netflix describes Blackout: “Six prolific authors have written six Black love stories all taking place during a power outage on a sweltering summer night. From the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love, Blackout takes place as a heatwave blankets New York City in darkness and causes an electric chaos. When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight. An ex-couple must bury their rivalry and walk the length of Manhattan to make it back to Brooklyn in time to kick off a block party. Two girls search for a lost photograph and find something more. Two boys trapped on the subway come face-to-face with their feelings. A pair of best friends stuck in the NYPL and surrounded by love stories figure out if there’s one in their future. A trio of kids on a senior trip take over a double-decker tour bus as they try to have a little fun…and work out their messy love triangle. Two strangers debate the philosophical nature of identity and wonder if they can find something else between them.”

UTA brokered the deal on behalf of the six authors and Temple Hill.



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Prominent Dutch Crime Reporter Is Shot in Center of Amsterdam

AMSTERDAM — A well-known Dutch crime reporter was shot in the head on Tuesday night after leaving a TV studio in the center of Amsterdam, the police said.

Videos on social media showed Peter R. de Vries, 64, lying on the street with blood streaming from his face. “He is still alive,” a bystander can be heard saying. The police wrote on Twitter that he was “seriously injured” and had been transported to the hospital.

Mr. de Vries, who has long been a fixture in the Netherlands for solving cold cases and hosting his own televised crime show for nearly two decades, has said he regularly received death threats.

Over the past year, Mr. de Vries, who is also the director of a law office, had been an adviser to a key witness in a trial over multiple killings allegedly ordered by a crime organization. Ridouan Taghi, accused of being the gang’s leader, is a Dutch-Moroccan, who was arrested in Dubai in 2019 and is the prime defendant in the case.

After the shooting, Prime Minister Mark Rutte and Ferdinand Grapperhaus, the justice minister, held an emergency meeting with security authorities. This was “an attack on a brave journalist and with that an attack on free journalism,” Mr. Rutte said.

The police said they had arrested three people, one of whom could be the “possible gunman,” but didn’t provide any more information about the suspects. The police did not comment on a motive.

Femke Halsema, the mayor of Amsterdam, called Mr. de Vries “a national hero for all of us,” at a news conference, describing the attack as a “brutish, cowardly crime.” She added that Mr. de Vries was “fighting for his life.”

Amsterdam — as well as other Dutch cities — has been the scene of multiple shootings over the past decade, in which criminals have targeted either each other or those interfering in their crimes. The nearby port of Rotterdam is one of the key gateways for importing cocaine into Europe, and the country is a leader in the illegal production of amphetamines and crystal meth.

“Normally those criminals kill each other, but now they are murdering lawyers and journalists,” said Minke Heino, who passed by the scene of the crime Tuesday night on her red bicycle. “They are acting with impunity. This is next level.”

Most recently, he has been in the news for the trial of Mr. Taghi. The lawyer for the key witness in that trial was killed in Amsterdam in 2019. The lawyer, Derk Wiersum, represented the same witness, known as Nabil B., whom Mr. de Vries is advising. The witness’s brother, Reduan B., was shot dead in 2018.

It is not the first time the Netherlands has seen a prominent figure attacked in a public place. In 2004, the provocative filmmaker Theo van Gogh was stabbed to death in Amsterdam, an episode that undermined the Netherlands’ image as a tolerant, peaceful country at the time. In 2002, the far-right politician Pim Fortuyn was assassinated days before a general election.

The news of Mr. de Vries’s shooting was met in the Netherlands with shock. “Unbelievable,” Thomas Bruning, the secretary of a Dutch association for journalists, wrote on Twitter. “This hits journalism right in the face.”

“This is terrible,” said Paul Vugts, a crime reporter for the Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool who lived under special police protection in 2017 and 2018. “Several people in connection to this case are either shot or killed. Peter would want us all to keep our heads cool and keep on working.”

Rosanne Kropman contributed reporting.



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Richard Donner Honored by Gene Hackman With ‘Superman’ Story – The Hollywood Reporter

Gene Hackman honored his Superman director Richard Donner on Tuesday with a hilarious tale from the iconic production.

The legendary Donner died Monday at the age of 91. Following the news, fans and colleagues took to social media to share their sorrow but also their appreciation for his vast filmmaking talent.

The retired and largely-now private Hackman is known for several beloved (and Oscar-winning) roles, among the top being Lex Luthor in Superman (1978). Mourning the late director, Hackman recounted a funny anecdote to The Hollywood Reporter.

“I showed up for the first day of make-up tests for Superman with a fine Lex Luthor moustache I’d grown for the role,” he began. “Dick, wearing his own handsome moustache, told me mine had to go. He bargained to lose his if I did mine. True to his word, he celebrated my last razor stroke by gleefully pulling off the fake whiskers he’d acquired for the occasion.”

Concluded Hackman, “Dick made it fun, and that’s why the films turned out that way, too.”

Another entertaining tidbit from the Superman production came from Donner himself, who said in a making-of feature years ago that he was aghast when he learned how much Marlon Brando was being paid for his role as Superman’s father, Jor-El ($3.7 million and 11.75 percent of the picture’s backend for 13 days of work).

“When I first came on the picture and I heard how much Marlon Brando was paid for it, I was really upset, because it seemed like much more money than anyone is worth,” Donner said then. However, he later admitted, “But then working with him and seeing him on film, to me, he is underpaid.”



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Netflix Cancels Four Comedies, Including ‘The Crew’ – The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix is canceling four comedies right before the holiday weekend.

The streamer has axed The Crew (ending with season one), Country Comfort (ending with season one), Mr. Iglesias (ending with part three) and Bonding (ending with season two).

In addition, Netflix closed a development deal with The Crew‘s Kevin James to develop a new single-camera comedy series for him to produce and star in.

The company also has another project with Mr. Iglesias’ Gabe Iglesias, with the third of a series of his stand-up specials slated to shoot this summer.

Netflix has also inked a development deal with Bonding creator Rightor Doyle.

Yet one comedy recently received a renewal from Netflix — The Upshaws will return for season two.

 

 



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Blumhouse Sues ‘Boss Level’ Producers, Hulu Over Recutting Deal – The Hollywood Reporter

Blumhouse Productions says it was “swindled” by the producers of Boss Level after it was brought in to recut and salvage the film because the initial version failed to sell.

Boss Level, which stars Mel Gibson, Frank Grillo and Naomi Watts, was licensed by Hulu — but only after Blumhouse reworked the picture, which the Jason Blum-led company says had been “disappointing and lacking in commercial appeal.”

Blumhouse is suing Emmett Furla Oasis Films, The Fyzz Facility, and actress-producer Meadow Williams, alleging that instead of paying what the parties agreed upon they chose to “misappropriate the fruits of Blumhouse’s creativity and labor for their own unlawful benefit while leaving Blumhouse high and dry.”

According to the breach of contract suit, which was filed Thursday by Marty Singer and David Jonelis of Lavely & Singer, Blumhouse also fronted the cost of the recut (which amounted to more than $126,000). “Blumhouse agreed to ‘recut the Picture’ and to ‘bring its ideas and creativity to the process,’” states the complaint. “As consideration for Blumhouse’s valuable services, the EFO Defendants jointly and severally agreed that, inter alia, should the ‘New Cut’ of the Picture be ‘licensed in the first instance to a streaming service, e.g., Netflix, Blumhouse [would] be paid 5% of the license fee paid by such service, without deduction of any kind.’”

Blumhouse says the new cut of Boss Level “contains a substantial amount of new material and unique elements created solely by Blumhouse, including a completely new final shot to end the Picture” and contends the contract said the film couldn’t be licensed until it was paid for the work.

“[W]ithout any notice to Blumhouse, the EFO Defendants licensed the ‘New Cut’ of the Picture to Hulu for an all-in fee of $11,750,000, and then (when the concealed deal was discovered by Blumhouse after-the-fact) failed and refused to pay Blumhouse the $587,500 fee to which it is entitled under the Agreement,” states the complaint. “Notably, prior to Blumhouse’s creation of its ‘New Cut,’ Hulu had passed on the opportunity to license the Picture from the EFO Defendants. It was only as a result of Blumhouse’s valuable services that Hulu became interested in licensing the Picture.”

Hulu is also being sued. Blumhouse says it has sent multiple cease and desist notices demanding that the streamer stop exploiting the film.

Blumhouse is seeking more than $1.5 million in damages and a declaration that EFO had no right to license Boss Level and Hulu has no right to exploit the film until it is paid.

The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to reps for Emmett Furla Oasis, Williams and Hulu for comment.



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First Look at ‘Many Saints of Newark’ – The Hollywood Reporter

The first new Sopranos content in 14 years has been released.

Below is the trailer for the long-awaited prequel movie The Many Saints of Newark:

The film has an ensemble cast that includes Michael Gandolfini (The Deuce) playing Tony Soprano, an uncanny young version of the iconic character played by the actor’s late father James Gandolfini.

The mob drama also stars Alessandro Nivola as Dickie Moltisanti (Christopher’s father), Jon Bernthal as Giovanni “Johnny Boy” Soprano, Corey Stoll as Junior Soprano, Vera Farmiga as Tony’s mother Livia Soprano, Billy Magnussen as Paulie “Walnuts” Gualtieri, John Magaro as Silvio Dante; plus there’s Leslie Odom Jr., Michaela De Rossi and Ray Liotta in undisclosed roles.

The New Line Cinema and Warner Bros. Pictures movie is set in 1967. Here’s the new description: “Young Anthony Soprano is growing up in one of the most tumultuous eras in Newark’s history, becoming a man just as rival gangsters begin to rise up and challenge the all-powerful DiMeo crime family’s hold over the increasingly race-torn city. Caught up in the changing times is the uncle he idolizes, Dickie Moltisanti, who struggles to manage both his professional and personal responsibilities — and whose influence over his impressionable nephew will help make the teenager into the all-powerful mob boss we’ll later come to know: Tony Soprano.”

The trailer is presented with the tagline, “legends aren’t born, they’re made,” and is perhaps more action-filled and intense than fans were expecting given the meditative quality of the final couple Sopranos seasons.

Sopranos creator David Chase wrote the film along with Lawrence Konner. Sopranos veteran Alan Taylor directed.

The Sopranos debuted in 1999 on HBO, ushered in a new era of prestige drama television and ran for six seasons before concluding with an infamous (and, seemingly, fatal to its protagonist) cut to black. Gandolfini won three Emmys for the role of a New Jersey mob boss and passed away from a heart attack in 2013.

The Many Saints of Newark will be in theaters on Oct. 1 and on HBO Max for 31 days following theatrical release.



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LAPD detains Times reporter covering unrest in Echo Park

Los Angeles Times reporter James Queally was briefly detained by the Los Angeles Police Department as he was covering a protest in Echo Park on Thursday evening.

Queally was reporting on the protest for The Times when he was detained. Protesters were also detained by police, who had issued a dispersal order for the area.

After inquiries by Times editors and its attorney, Queally was released. It was not immediately clear why he was detained, but police had issued a statement a short time earlier saying reporters were subject to dispersal orders in the area.

Times Managing Editor Kimi Yoshino said the paper was outraged that Queally was detained simply for doing his job. The Times immediately protested to authorities and he was released without charges.

In an interview shortly after his release, which occurred around 9:15 p.m., Queally said he was wearing an LAPD-issued press badge on a lanyard around his neck when he was grabbed by two officers and placed in zip ties despite immediately and repeatedly telling them that he was a working Times reporter.

“I was pretty calm, and they weren’t violent or anything, but I was like, ‘Check the credentials, L.A. Times.’ No answer. ‘Check the credentials, L.A. Times.’ No answer.”

Eventually the two officers detaining him called over a sergeant, and Queally again said that he was a working reporter. The sergeant told him that it didn’t matter, Queally said.

“He was less than interested with the fact that I was press,” Queally said. “I said, ‘Are you sure you want to do this? We really doing this?’ And he said, ‘Yes, this is the policy tonight.’”

Queally had been covering demonstrations in the area, where authorities were clearing a homeless encampment, since about 5 p.m., he said. Hours later, after demonstrators were flashing lights in officers’ faces, the LAPD declared the gathering unlawful.

Queally said he at one point heard an officer on a speakerphone say something about a media area, but he could not make out the details.

“I didn’t know what they were directing people to do, so I kind of stayed in the crowd,” Queally said. He said he moved farther off to the side, away from the skirmish line, to make his status as an observer clearer, but that “that did not appear to work, obviously.”

After an officer announced that those in the crowd were no longer free to leave, about 20 cops came out of an alleyway and helped surround the crowd from all angles, kettling them, Queally said.

Queally said he was standing with Lexis-Olivier Ray, a reporter with L.A. Taco whom Queally had written a story about earlier this month. The story covered how Ray had been charged with failing to disperse during a gathering he was covering after the Dodger’s World Series victory. Ray was the only person among hundreds in the streets that night to face such a charge.

Now, Queally realized, he was facing a similar fate.

“I wrote a story last week about the problems with the LAPD being overly aggressive with a member of the press that made them look bad. I was standing next to the same person, discussing with him again how this could be a problem again. And then it happened,” Queally said. “That’s a little maddening.”

On Thursday, Ray tweeted video of Queally being arrested, alerting other Times reporters and editors.

Queally said he was about to be placed on a transport bus with other detainees when additional LAPD officials came and released him, telling him to go to a designated media area — with one official suggesting Queally should have been there all along.

“They were questioning why I wasn’t covering the protest from the media pen,” Queally said, “which would have been … impossible by the rules of space and time.”

Kate Cagle, an anchor and reporter with Spectrum News, also was detained in zip ties and later released. She tweeted video of her being walked off by officers.

Before Queally’s release, Capt. Stacy Spell, an LAPD spokesman, had said that if Queally — an award-winning courts reporter for The Times — hadn’t done “anything out of character” during the protest, then he would likely get “a dust-off” and be released.

“I wouldn’t expect James would do anything out of character, but we have to make sure that that wasn’t the case,” Spell said.

Matt Pearce, president of The Times’ employees’ union, had demanded Queally’s immediate release.

“Journalism is not a crime, @LAPDHQ,” Pearce said in a statement on social media. “Stop making excuses for arresting our journalists. You know who they are, and you know they’re there on behalf of the public.”

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Des Moines officer says newspaper reporter covering protest was arrested after pepper spray shots

An Iowa officer testified on Monday that he arrested a Des Moines Register reporter assigned to cover a Black Lives Matter protest last year after she did not leave the area following his firing of pepper spray shots. 

Des Moines Officer Luke Wilson spoke during the trial for reporter Andrea Sahouri and her then-boyfriend Spenser Robnett, saying he did not know at the time that Sahouri was a reporter, The Associated Press reported. Sahouri and Robnett face misdeamor charges of failure to disperse and interference with official acts. 

The case against Sahouri has received local, national and international scrutiny from journalists and human rights advocates as she is believed to be the first working journalist to be tried in the U.S. since 2018, according to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. 

In his testimony, Wilson recounted that he responded outside Merle Hay mall on May 31 where demonstrators were breaking windows and throwing projectiles, such as rocks and water bottles, at officers. He said he fired pepper spray from a fogger to break up the crowd, but Sahouri remained. 

“Once I determined she wasn’t leaving, I had to take action,” he said, according to the AP. 

The officer said he grabbed Sahouri while firing pepper spray with his other hand, which hit both her and Robnett, who returned to retrieve her from custody. Wilson said he had thought he activated his body camera but discovered later that he had not.

Prosecutor Brecklyn Carey told jurors that footage shows police directing a crowd that included Sahouri and Robnett, to disperse at about 6:30 p.m. and shows 90 minutes later Robnett attempting to pull Sahouri away from the arresting officer, according to the AP.

But defense attorney Nicholas Klinefeldt argued that the 6:30 p.m. order was directed at those blocking an intersection and that the couple followed those instructions. 

He said Sahouri and Robnett ran when tear gas was deployed an hour and a half later, and the officer grabbed and pepper sprayed her while she identified herself as press, to which Wilson allegedly responded, “that’s not what I asked.”

The Black Lives Matter protests last summer broke out nationally after George Floyd was killed after a Minneapolis officer knelt on his neck for several minutes. 

Sahouri was among the more than 125 reporters detained or arrested during demonstrations in 2020, with most not being charged or having their charges dismissed. Twelve other reporters still face prosecution, the AP reported, citing the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. 

If the two are found guilty, they would face hundreds of dollars in fines, a criminal record and, although unlikely, potentially up to 30 days in jail on each count.



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