By Erin Aubry Kaplan
This text was produced by the nonprofit publication Capital & Principal. It’s printed right here, through Phrase In Black, with permission.
Final month, on her thirty eighth birthday, Georgia Fort informed me that she lastly looks like an grownup. Not as a result of her three youngsters are getting older or as a result of she’s reached a landmark degree of accomplishment in her 16-year profession as an impartial journalist in her residence state of Minnesota.
Her new sense of maturity shouldn’t be about accolades, however adversity.
Earlier this yr she and fellow impartial journalist Don Lemon had been arrested by federal officers after overlaying a protest, and in a single day, turned nationwide symbols of the struggle to protect free speech and a free press within the more and more repressive age of Trump.
“Federal fees will definitely try this – develop you up,” Fort stated.
Whereas the expertise has thrust her right into a limelight she by no means anticipated, she’s embracing the chance to be an emblem of resistance — to the makes an attempt to curb press freedom, and to greater forces of oppression and regression that for her have turn out to be inconceivable to disregard. Fort believes journalists have a specific obligation to confront all of it. For her, that dedication can be knowledgeable by her Christian religion.
“Now, spiritually, I really feel like I would like to face,” she stated. “There’s no extra room for uncertainty. You must maintain your head up.”
Arrested for doing the work
President Donald Trump’s long-running assault on the press took an ominous activate Jan. 30, when Fort and Lemon had been arrested — she in Minnesota, he in Los Angeles. Each Black journalists had coated a protest towards Immigration Customs Enforcement at a Minnesota church pastored by an ICE official. Together with seven activists, Fort and Lemon had been charged with conspiracy and interfering with folks’s proper of worship. Each are awaiting trial.
The arrests appeared like a convergence of Trump’s assaults on the press and on Black folks — journalists and others — who routinely converse out towards injustice. Additionally they felt just like the end result of the brutal ICE raids in Minnesota that started in January and resulted within the deadly shootings of two Americans, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, by Division of Homeland Safety brokers. That a lot got here to a head throughout February, Black Historical past Month, made Fort extra resolved to step up.
“As we celebrated the centennial of Black Historical past Month, we celebrated so lots of my ancestors and who they stood up for,” she stated.
The assaults obtained private for Fort final June. She was already overlaying the brutal techniques of ICE, protection that included the story of Isabel Lopez, a 27-year-old poet and activist who had been roughed up by brokers throughout a protest June 3. Fort posted a video of the incident on social media. Per week later, Lopez got here to Fort’s workplace for an interview. Minutes after she left, as Fort watched, ICE brokers swarmed Lopez, arrested her and charged her with assault. The veteran journalist was rattled.
“It didn’t really feel like a coincidence,” she stated. “I felt harassed, like they had been sending me a message.”
The sensation intensified from there, although Fort continued following protests and press conferences, typically for 12 to 16 hours at a stretch. After Good was killed, she held a personal session for media personnel to indicate digital camera footage of that incident.
Work has turn out to be extra sophisticated since her arrest. Fort had steadily labored alone, livestreaming occasions, however now looks like a goal. Safety feels important.
“I acquired threats, even earlier than the arrest,” she stated. “There’s a price to telling the reality.”
Fort and Lemon aren’t the primary Black journalists in Minnesota arrested for doing their jobs. Again in 2020, through the protests in Minneapolis over the homicide of George Floyd, CNN anchor Omar Jimenez, who was on the scene with a crew overlaying the protests, obtained handcuffed and arrested on stay tv.
“After I noticed that I knew that in the event that they didn’t respect his press credentials they wouldn’t respect mine,” Fort recalled. “I began to pay attention to how I confirmed up in areas.”
She additionally started to grasp the precariousness of journalism globally, particularly for journalists of colour, together with in much more harmful locations like Gaza, the place greater than 240 journalists had been killed within the final two years, in accordance with the United Nations.
“Omar was arrested, and there have been no penalties for it,” Fort stated. “Or in Gaza.”
Fort has labored in media since faculty, beginning out as a radio host targeted on music and hip-hop earlier than finally transitioning into information. When she was 19, her 4-month-old daughter — her firstborn youngster — died of suffocation within the care of a babysitter, a tragedy that knowledgeable her later protection of deaths of younger folks, a few of them the results of police shootings.
“As a mother who misplaced a baby, I used to be steadily interviewing mothers on the day their youngster had been killed,” she stated. “It allowed me to seek out objective in my very own ache, gave me a a lot deeper cause to get up and need to stand up and go to work.”
Fort landed her first contract in 2015 as a information reporter at an area tv station in Columbus, Ga., finally making her method again to Minnesota. Years of doing a mixture of breaking information, court docket reporting and what she known as “really feel good tales” set the stage for overlaying the 2021 trial of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who was convicted of homicide for the killing of George Floyd.
Why the Black Press issues
The experiences with conventional media and street-level protection honed her strategy to impartial journalism. Understanding the position of Black reporters within the historical past of journalism itself was additionally key.
Black media’s mission to not ignore or sanitize painful truths is without doubt one of the causes, Fort believes, that it stays probably the most very important establishments in America, regardless of being chronically underinvested in and undervalued. She secured a contract from Goal in 2023 that enabled her to launch a broadcast information present, “Right here’s The Fact,” which coated a variety of subjects, was immaculately produced by a well-paid workers, and went on to win three Higher Midwest Emmy awards. In 2023 she additionally co-established the Heart for Broadcast Journalism to mentor younger journalists and diversify the media business in Minnesota. After Trump returned to workplace final yr and commenced attacking variety, fairness and inclusion through government orders and federal workforce purges, the Goal contract, together with so many others, was eradicated.
Fort stated shifts of thoughts and coronary heart should occur within the nation earlier than issues change, or change again. In the meantime, Black voices in media stay highly effective, and impactful. New York Occasions opinion columnist Jamelle Bouie asserted final month that Trump’s assault on democracy has at all times been racially motivated, however too little acknowledged, writing, “The query is why so many others have refused to see what he has by no means bothered to cover.”
David Jackson’s photograph of Emmett Until in an open casket in 1955 was a graphic picture that was seen around the globe, exposing the hypocrisy of American democracy. The 14-year-old was lynched and horribly brutalized by a White mob in Cash, Miss.
“That photograph modified American tradition,” she stated. “It made America look within the mirror and acknowledge how the racial terror and brutality was fallacious. Mamie Until took a stand, and the Black press confirmed up.”
Standing within the custom of resistance
Fort stated there are indicators that America is wanting in that mirror once more. Six prosecutors in Minnesota give up reasonably than observe the Justice Division’s orders to research the widow of Renee Good, and after Alex Pretti was killed, a Republican candidate for governor dropped out of the race. Nonetheless, Fort has no illusions.
“I do know what it appears to be like like now, however whenever you take a look at what our ancestors needed to overcome, that ought to give us hope,” she stated. “Folks want to concentrate to what’s taking place and ask themselves, what are you prepared to do about it? My reply is to maintain documenting, telling tales as a result of it’ll encourage others to hew to fact.”
“It will not be a lot nevertheless it issues,” she added. “I is perhaps below assault, defunded, even afraid. However I’ll proceed to do it.”
That is from Erin Aubry Kaplan’s column, The Arc, which examines the persistent boundaries to racial justice and alternatives for progress in an period of receding Black presence in Los Angeles and California.
This text was unique.

















