Appeals court finds probable cause to charge Don Lemon in church incident

A federal appeals court has ruled that the Justice Department showed probable cause to charge former CNN host Don Lemon and four others for their involvement in an anti-ICE protest that stormed a Minneapolis church. However, the court refused to compel a lower judge to issue arrest warrants. The decision highlights tensions between press freedom claims and federal charges under religious interference laws.

On Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit determined that the Justice Department had established probable cause to charge Don Lemon and four unnamed others in connection with an anti-ICE protest last Sunday. The group stormed Cities Church in Minneapolis during a worship service, targeting the site because one pastor is reportedly an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

The ruling, unsealed Saturday, came after the department sought to force a Minnesota district court to approve five arrest warrants. While it affirmed the basis for charges on paper, the appeals court declined to mandate the warrants' issuance. Magistrate Judge Doug Micko had previously rejected signing Lemon's warrant, citing insufficient evidence from prosecutors.

Lemon's lawyer contends he was acting as an independent journalist, protected by the First Amendment while covering the event. Prosecutors counter that Lemon coordinated with anti-ICE organizers beforehand, embedding himself with the protesters. "Freedom of the press extends to a lot of different areas," Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche stated. "It does not extend to somebody just trespassing and being embedded with a group of rioters and being part of the group that storms inside of a church."

The case invokes the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, aimed at protecting religious exercise, which the Trump administration is using here. Previously, the Biden administration applied it against pro-life activists blocking abortion clinics. Three organizers, including Black Lives Matter figure Nekima Levy Armstrong, have already been arrested by the FBI.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon posted on X: "Stay tuned 🤨." The Justice Department, vowing to pursue Lemon "to the ends of the Earth," may now pursue a grand jury indictment or re-present the case to another judge.

This development coincides with unrest in Minneapolis, where federal agents fatally shot an armed undocumented immigrant wanted for violent assault during a targeted operation Saturday morning. The man, carrying a loaded semi-automatic handgun, was killed after posing a threat to officers, per the Department of Homeland Security.

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Dramatic arrest of Don Lemon by federal agents outside a Minnesota church during an anti-ICE protest.
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Former CNN anchor Don Lemon arrested over church protest

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Federal agents arrested former CNN anchor Don Lemon and three others on Thursday night in connection with a January 18 protest at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. The demonstration targeted the church due to its ties to Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel and disrupted a worship service without causing physical harm. Critics decry the arrests as an assault on press freedoms, while officials describe the event as a coordinated attack on religious liberty.

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon vowed to remain outspoken after his arrest tied to a protest that disrupted a church service in Minnesota. He and fellow journalist Georgia Fort face federal charges but insist they were only reporting on the anti-ICE demonstration. The case has sparked debate over press freedoms and religious rights.

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Former CNN host Don Lemon pleaded not guilty in a federal court in Minnesota to charges related to his alleged involvement in an anti-ICE protest that disrupted a church service in St. Paul last month. He was arrested in Los Angeles and faces accusations of conspiracy to violate religious freedom and breaches of the FACE Act. Lemon maintains his actions were protected under the First Amendment as journalism.

Nine defendants are on trial in federal court in Fort Worth over a July 4, 2025 protest outside the Prairieland ICE detention center in Alvarado, Texas, that ended with a police officer being shot. Prosecutors say the demonstrators operated as a coordinated “North Texas antifa cell” and have pursued terrorism-related counts alongside charges such as attempted murder and rioting—an approach the defense disputes and that legal analysts say could shape how courts handle protest activity and group-label evidence.

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President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to suppress protests in Minneapolis against federal immigration enforcement, following the fatal shooting of a U.S. citizen by an ICE agent. The incident, captured on video, has sparked widespread demonstrations and criticism of the Trump administration's tactics. Minnesota officials have vowed to challenge any such invocation in court.

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a civil-rights investigation into a pro-Palestinian protest that surrounded a Manhattan synagogue during an event on Jewish immigration to Israel, after demonstrators reportedly blocked access and chanted hostile and antisemitic slogans. Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon announced the probe on social media, while New York City officials offered sharply contrasting responses.

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A federal jury in Texas convicted eight defendants on Friday of providing material support to terrorists for their roles in a July 4, 2025, attack on the Prairieland ICE detention center in Alvarado. The incident involved fireworks, vandalism, and gunfire that injured a police officer. Prosecutors described the event as a premeditated terror attack inspired by antifa ideology.

 

 

 

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