Columbia Journalism Review: A reporter’s arrest is just the latest reason to worry about press freedom in Missouri

Columbia Journalism Review: A reporter’s arrest is just the latest reason to worry about press freedom in Missouri by Doran Lee:

LAST WEEK, Fox 2 St. Louis reporter Chris Hayes was placed in handcuffs by police for attempting to bring a camera into a public meeting in Kinloch, Missouri—a small municipality right next door to Ferguson—just a day after Hayes had revealed stunning mismanagement by the town’s police force. In a segment for Fox 2, Hayes reported that he was charged with disorderly conduct and failure to comply, and faces a September court date.

Based on that report—neither Hayes and Fox 2, nor the Kinloch police and court responded to requests for further information this week—the incident appears to be an unusually egregious abridgment of press freedom. But, sadly, that’s not an isolated event in Missouri. In fact, there’s plenty of evidence—ranging from arrests of reporters to new legal obstacles to mundane but persistent restrictions on access—that the Show-Me State has a serious problem with secrecy, and even outright hostility to the functions of the Fourth Estate. Consider: …

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