Former CNN host Don Lemon charged in anti-ICE protest at Minnesota church

Brandon Drenonand
Grace Eliza Goodwin
Watch: "I will not be silenced", says Don Lemon after arrest

Former CNN host Don Lemonhas been arrested and charged after entering a Minnesota church and filming anti-immigration enforcement protesters as they disrupted a service.

After appearing in court, Lemon was released from custody. He told media outside that he was arrested for covering the news, adding: "I will not be silenced."

Lemon was charged with conspiracy to deprive rights and interfering with religious freedoms, by allegedly obstructing someone's First Amendment rights by force.

Lemon went into the Cities Church in St Paul on 18 January with protesters who said one of the pastors was an immigration enforcement official.

Getty Images Don Lemon speaks on stage during a panel discussion in New York City in OctoberGetty Images

Lemon, an independent journalist, said he was taken into custody by federal agents on Thursday. He did not enter a plea in court.

"Last night the DOJ sent a team of federal agents to arrest me in the middle of the night for something that I have been doing for the last 30 years and that is covering the news," Lemon said.

"I have spent my entire career covering the news. I will not stop now," Lemon added.

"In fact, there is no more important time than right now, this very moment, for a free and independent media that shines a light on the truth and holds those in power accountable."

Lemon and eight other co-defendants, including another journalist, have been charged with conspiracy against religious freedom at a place of worship and injuring, intimidating, and interfering with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of worship.

US Department of Justice questioned over arrest of Don Lemon

"Don will fight these charges vigorously and thoroughly in court," his lawyer Abbe Lowell said earlier on Friday in a statement posted on Lemon's Instagram account.

The lawyer added: "This unprecedented attack on the First Amendment and transparent attempt to distract attention from the many crises facing this administration will not stand."

Lowell said Lemon had been arrested while he was in Los Angeles covering the Grammy Awards.

US Attorney General Pam Bondi said three others had been arrested: local independent journalist Georgia Fort, along with activists Trahem Jeen Crews and Jamael Lydell Lundy.

Fort was also released earlier on Friday after her court appearance in Minnesota.

America's top law enforcement official accused them of participating in a "coordinated attack" on the church.

FBI Director Kash Patel said investigators from his agency and the DHS had arrested Lemon and the other three.

Fort posted a livestream of federal agents arriving at her home to arrest her.

"Agents are at my door right now," she said in the clip. "My children are here, they're impacted by this."

President Donald Trump's administration initially sought to charge eight people involved in the Minnesota church protest with conspiring to deprive rights and interfering with someone's religious freedom in a house of worship.

But a magistrate judge who reviewed the evidence approved charges for only three of those involved, excluding Lemon.

The government challenged that decision, but an appeals court suggested prosecutors take the case to a federal grand jury - a panel of citizens that evaluates if there is enough evidence to charge someone in a case.

That grand jury ultimately approved charges against the nine defendants, including Lemon, who were present at the church protest.

A longstanding Trump critic, Lemon was fired from CNN in April 2023 after 17 years with the company. The morning show host had apologised for on-air comments that Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, then 51, was past her prime.

In the Minnesota church protest, he live-streamed with protesters on YouTube. The broadcast began with Lemon standing with the group in a car park where he says: "This is an operation that is secret.

"I can't tell you what is going to happen, but you're going to watch it live unfold here on 'The Don Lemon Show.'"

The indictment alleges Lemon "took steps to maintain operation secrecy by reminding certain co-conspirators to not disclose the target of the operation and stepped away momentarily so his mic would not accidentally divulge certain points of the planning session".

He then followed the group - whom he called "resistance protesters" - into the church, initially without his camera operator.

The indictment alleges that Lemon and the other co-defendants "entered the Church in a coordinated takeover-style attack and engaged in acts of oppression, intimidation, threats, interference, and physical obstruction".

Protesters chant "Justice for Renee Good", referring to the US citizen who was fatally shot in her vehicle on 7 January during a confrontation with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer in Minneapolis.

When Lemon and his co-defendants entered the church, together with other protesters who have not been charged, prosecutors allege that they "oppressed, threatened, and intimidated the Church congregants and pastors by physically occupying most of the main aisle and row of chairs near the front of the Church, engaging in menacing and threatening behavior".

Footage showed a chaotic scene unfolding inside the church, which belongs to the Southern Baptist Convention, as protesters and members of the congregation shout at each other.

Lemon repeatedly says he is there as a journalist and is unaffiliated with demonstrators.

"We're not part of the activists, but we're here just reporting on them," he says.

The pastor says: "This is unacceptable, it's shameful. It's shameful to interrupt a public gathering of Christians in worship."

Lemon and two other co-defendants at one point "largely surrounded" the pastor "in an attempt to oppress and intimidate him", prosecutors allege.

Prosecutors also allege that Lemon "posted himself" at the main door to the church "where he confronted some congregants and physically obstructed them as they tried to exit the Church building to challenge them with 'facts' about US immigration policy".

Harmeet Dhillon, of the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, said during an interview with podcaster Megyn Kelly on Friday: "We're going to pursue this to the ends of the Earth."

The White House appeared to celebrate the arrest, posting a photo of Lemon on its official X account with the caption "when life gives you lemons", next to an emoji of chain links.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called the detention of Lemon "shocking" and "alarming."

CNN said it raised "profoundly concerning questions about press freedom and the First Amendment". The network said it would follow Lemon's case closely.

This is the second high-profile incident this month of the Trump administration investigating a journalist, raising the alarm of free speech advocates.

On 14 January, the FBI showed up unannounced to the home of a Washington Post reporter with a search warrant and seized her devices over the alleged leak of classified information, although she herself was not charged with any crime.

Protests are continuing in Minnesota, where an operation by federal immigration agents has sparked confrontations that have left two US citizens dead: Renee Good, a mother-of-three, and Alex Pretti, a nurse.


Trending Now