November 6, 2024

MLive reporter arrested while covering violent Proud Boys rally released from police custody

Proud Boys #ProudBoys

a man standing in front of a building: Samuel Robinson, MLive © Mickey Ciokajlo | mciokajl@mlive.com/mlive.com/TNS Samuel Robinson, MLive

KALAMAZOO, MI — An MLive reporter arrested while covering a Proud Boys rally in Kalamazoo is no longer in police custody.

Reporter Samuel J. Robinson, 23, was in downtown Kalamazoo the afternoon of Saturday, Aug. 15 to cover a rally of the far-right group Proud Boys. Marchers chanted and waved U.S., Trump, and Gadsden flags and other symbols.

The rally drew counter-protesters opposing the group’s ideology. The group has been labeled by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group composed of white nationalists. The group rejects that label, but refers to its members as “Western chauvinists.”

Violence erupted between the opposing sides.

Robinson was recording video footage of the event for MLive via Facebook Live and Twitter. Robinson at 1:49 p.m. tweeted there was no visible police presence as the violence exacerbated.

Shortly thereafter, dozens of police officers arrived at a parking structure where the march had advanced. Many were wearing riot gear.

Footage recorded by Robinson, who is Black, shows he identified himself to police as a reporter as police seemingly took him to the ground. The video abruptly ended with Robinson repeatedly stating he’s being arrested.

Within a few hours, Robinson was released from custody on $100 bond. Records show he was arrested on a charge of impeding traffic.

“The working press must be assured the right to cover public events, that clearly are in the public interest, without reprisals,” said John Hiner, vice president of content for MLive Media Group. “These situations are difficult for all involved, but media who identify themselves are not a part of the event — they are working it, just like the police.”

Footage recorded by others and posted on social media show police marching in formation toward ralliers.

“This is the Kalamazoo Police,” one officer states on a megaphone to the large crowd. “This gathering is contrary to city ordinances. Your 10 minutes to clear the area have expired. You face arrest.”

Kalamazoo Deputy City Manager Jeff Chamberlain said at 4:15 p.m. the city was working on a statement regarding the rally and Robinson’s arrest. That statement has not been provided to MLive as of 6 p.m.

The Michigan Democratic Jewish Caucus issued a statement regarding the Proud Boys’ rally and resulting violence, saying its members are appalled.

“The ‘Proud Boys’ are not only deeply racist, misogynistic, and Islamophobic, but also deeply antisemitic,” the statement reads. “When white supremacists gather in an American city carrying Trump flags and shouting racist slogans, then proceed to physically attack peaceful, nonviolent protesters, it is an act of political violence that threatens us all.”

Noah Arbit, founder and chair of the Michigan Democratic Jewish Caucus stated, “Today’s shocking and disturbing violence in Kalamazoo should focus the minds of Michigan voters on the stakes of the upcoming presidential election. The prospect of re-electing Donald Trump, whose hate-filled rhetoric provides succor to Jew-haters, racists, misogynists, and Islamophobes across the country, including the ‘Proud Boys’ who showed up today in Kalamazoo, should strike fear into the heart of every Jewish voter in Michigan and across the country. To any Jew who supports Donald Trump, I ask: ‘If the Nazis support this man, how can you?’”

Earlier this year, MLive photographer Nicole Hester was fired upon by Detroit Police Corporal Daniel Debono, 32, as she covered a Black Lives Matter/anti-police brutality protest in Detroit on May 31. Hester was struck by as many as a dozen pellets about the face and body, leaving welts and narrowly missing an eye. She was with her fiancé, freelance photographer Seth Herald, who was working for AFP, and Matt Hatcher, who was shooting for Getty Images.

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy on July 20 announced she had charged Debono with three counts of felonious assault — one count each for Hester, Herald, and Hatcher — stemming from the incident.

The photographers were walking when they encountered Debono and two other officers at Woodward Avenue and State Street. They identified themselves as members of the press and had their hands up, asking to cross the street, Worthy wrote in a statement.

As the three began to cross the street it is alleged that Debono fired his weapon at them, striking all three with rubber pellets, Worthy wrote.

The shooting was unprovoked, and at no time did the three complainants do anything to cause the defendant to shoot at them, Worthy wrote.

Read more:

Rally turns violent as Proud Boys met by counter-protesters in downtown Kalamazoo

Rumored Proud Boys event sparks counter vigil in Kalamazoo

Charges issued against Detroit police officer accused of shooting rubber pellets at 3 photographers covering protests

Detroit George Floyd police brutality protest turns violent as police fire tear gas, rubber bullets

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