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Nearly two years after arrest, a judge dismisses charges against former JPR reporter April Ehrlich

Medford police at Hawthorne Park in Medford, Ore., on Tuesday, Sept. 22 while clearing an encampment of people experiencing homelessness.
Erik Neumann
/
JPR News
Medford police at Hawthorne Park in Medford, Ore., on Tuesday, Sept. 22 while clearing an encampment of people experiencing homelessness.

Charges against April Ehrlich have been dismissed, just before her pending trial. The charges stemmed from Ehrlich's efforts to cover the evacuation of a homeless camp by Medford Police in 2020.

On September 22, 2020, April Ehrlich 鈥 now a reporter for Oregon Public Broadcasting 鈥 was in Hawthorne Park, as police were removing camp residents. When Ehrlich attempted to record interactions between police and the campers, she was arrested, handcuffed, and detained. The Medford City Attorney鈥檚 Office charged Ehrlich with trespassing and resisting arrest.

Last month, Medford Municipal Court Judge William Haberlach granted a motion filed by Ehrlich鈥檚 attorney, Jacob Houze, to dismiss the trespassing charge. Days later, Haberlach also granted the Medford City Attorney鈥檚 Office motion to dismiss the charge of resisting arrest.

A bar graph based on 2020 incident reports to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker shows a higher than usual amount of arrests and assaults against journalists.
U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.
A bar graph based on 2020 incident reports to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker shows a higher than usual amount of arrests and assaults against journalists.

In a release, Ehrlich says she was humiliated and traumatized by her arrest, and calls her prosecution an attack on the Constitution鈥檚 First Amendment, and democratic freedom of the press.

Another reporter who did face trial in a similar incident in Iowa, Andrea Sahouri, agrees.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a reason why powerful actors are trying to silence us, and keep us from doing our jobs,鈥 began Sahouri. 鈥淲e need to continue to stay strong, to continue to hold people accountable, more than ever.

鈥淎nd I think that while there鈥檚 real risk to our job, we should also feel motivated to keep going, because there鈥檚 a lot at stake if we don鈥檛.鈥

Sahouri was pepper-sprayed and arrested by police while covering a Black Lives Matter protest for the Des Moines Register in 2020.

A year later, a jury deliberated for less than two hours before acquitting her of two misdemeanors: failure to disperse and interference with official acts.

On Thursday, JPR Executive Director Paul Westhelle hailed the dismissal of charges against Ehrlich.

"April was doing her job that day working on behalf of the public to report on an important issue facing our community but was prevented from doing her work, handcuffed and confined for hours in the Jackson County jail," he said in a release. " We're glad this incident is settled and that the court recognized that lawful news gathering is an essential element of our democratic society and is protected by the First Amendment."

Sahouri鈥檚 trial and Ehrlich鈥檚 arrest drew the attention of free press advocates and journalism organizations across the globe. The said it documented the highest number of arrests and assaults against journalists in 2020, more than any other time in its five-year history.

The uproar over the death of George Floyd by Minneapolis police 鈥 as well as the fanning of anti-media sentiment by President Trump and other conservative politicians 鈥 created a volatile environment for reporters trying to cover social justice protests and the response by law enforcement.

Copyright 2022

Brian Bull joined the KLCC News Team in June 2016. He is a 20-year reporter who has worked at NPR, South Dakota Public Broadcasting, Wisconsin Public Radio, and ideastream in Cleveland. His reporting has netted dozens of accolades, including three Edward R. Murrow Awards and the Ohio Associated Press' Best Reporter Award in 2012.