Topic: DOJ and Civil Rights Enforcement
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DOJ and Civil Rights Enforcement

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Bondi Defends Don Lemon Church-Arrest Charges as Compatible With First Amendment
Attorney General Pam Bondi used a TV appearance to defend the Trump Justice Department’s decision to charge former CNN anchor Don Lemon and other anti‑ICE activists over a disruptive protest at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, arguing the arrests do not violate the First Amendment because worshippers also have a constitutional right to worship freely and safely. Bondi said the demonstrators "stormed" the church from multiple directions during Sunday services, blocked parents from reaching children in Sunday school and prevented parishioners from exiting, and she cited the federal Church Arson Prevention Act as authority for treating the incident as a criminal civil‑rights violation. She accused Lemon of illegally blocking a parishioner and "screaming, yelling at the pastor," while Lemon maintains he was present as an independent journalist and that the charges amount to retaliation for protected newsgathering. The case is emerging as a test of how far the administration will push federal civil‑rights and FACE‑style statutes to prosecute disruptive protests at houses of worship, and of whether courts will accept DOJ’s line that the protesters’ conduct crossed from speech into intimidation and obstruction. Civil‑liberties advocates and media figures are already using the Lemon case on social media as a bellwether for press freedom and the right to document protests inside sensitive venues.
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