Don Lemon didn’t see the handcuffs coming.
The veteran journalist, in Los Angeles to cover the Grammys, was suddenly taken by federal agents in a move his lawyer calls a “constitutional nightmare.” Supporters are furious. Critics are circling. And behind closed doors, a grand jury is quietly weighing his fu… Continues…
Don Lemon’s arrest has instantly become a flashpoint in an already fractured nation. Federal agents moved in just days after his presence at a charged anti-immigration protest inside a Minnesota church, where demonstrators confronted a pastor who also served as an ICE official. With both the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations involved, and a grand jury empaneled, the case now sits at the explosive intersection of journalism, protest, and federal power.
His attorney, Abbe Lowell, insists Lemon was doing nothing more than his job: documenting unrest, asking questions, and standing where the story was unfolding. To Lowell and Lemon’s defenders, the timing feels less like justice and more like retaliation, especially as questions still swirl around the deaths of protesters Renee Good and Alex Pretti. As the charges remain sealed and the government stays largely silent, the battle lines are being drawn: between security and dissent, between accountability and intimidation, and over what it really means to protect the First Amendment when a journalist becomes the one in chains.