Pam Bondi Releases Video Statement After the Arrest of Don Lemon: ‘We Are Coming After You’


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Former CNN host Don Lemon and three others were arrested and federally charged in connection with a Jan. 18 incident in which protesters burst into Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, shouting and disrupting worship. Attorney General Pam Bondi said teh arrests — of Lemon, Trahern Jeen Crews, Georgia Fort, and Jamael lydell Lundy — reflect the administration’s commitment too protect the right to worship and promised enforcement against those who violate it.

The indictment alleges conspiracy to deprive rights and interfering by force with the free exercise of religion, citing violations of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances and Ku Klux Klan Acts.Prosecutors say Lemon conspired with others to intimidate and threaten worshippers; video shows him livestreaming from inside the church and participating with the protesters.

Lemon insists he was acting as a journalist and an observer, while critics and commentators (including attorney Gregg Jarrett) argue footage shows him as an active participant who helped plan and join the intrusion, handed out supplies to demonstrators, and taunted congregants — conduct they say places him outside First amendment journalistic protections and could support additional allegations.


Hours after former CNN host Don Lemon and others were arrested in connection with the invasion of a Minneapolis church, Attorney General Pam Bondi made it clear that such stunts will not be tolerated any time, any place.

“Make no mistake. Under President Trump’s leadership and this administration, you have the right to worship freely and safely,” Bondi said in a post on X.

“And if I haven’t been clear already, if you violate that sacred right, we are coming after you,” she said.

Earlier Friday, Bondi announced that “at my direction, early this morning federal agents arrested Don Lemon, Trahern Jeen Crews, Georgia Fort, and Jamael Lydell Lundy, in connection with the coordinated attack on Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota.”

Lemon and his co-defendants face charges of conspiracy to deprive rights and interfering by force with someone’s First Amendment rights, which are violations of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances and Ku Klux Klan Acts, according to the indictment against Lemon and other defendants.

Lemon and a group of anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement protesters burst into Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, during the Jan. 18 worship services and proceeded to scream and chant slogans. Lemon livestreamed himself inside the church with the group.

The indictment alleged Lemon conspired with others “to injure, oppress, threaten, and intimidate multiple persons… in the free exercise and enjoyment of the rights and privileges secured to them.”

Lemon has maintained that all he did was “commit an act of journalism” by following the protesters inside the church. He angrily challenged federal officials on Jan. 22 to “keep trying” to come after him.

In an opinion piece for Fox News, attorney Gregg Jarrett said Lemon was not protected by the First Amendment protection given to journalists because he was a participant in the church invasion.

“In footage that Lemon posted online, it appears that he was not merely an observer recording the illegal protest inside the church, which would be a typical role of a reporter. Instead, he seemed to be an active participant who embedded himself with the mob and joined their cause in harassing and tormenting the parishioners,” Jarrett wrote.

“Based on video footage, Lemon knew of the protesters’ plan to barge into the church and take over morning prayers,” he wrote.

He admitted that he had done “reconnaissance” with them, some of whom were members of Minnesota Black Lives Matter. He handed out donuts and coffee to the demonstrators and vowed to accompany them on their “Operation Pull-Up,” Jarrett wrote.

“As activists rushed into the Cities Church, so did Lemon who shoved his microphone in the face of the obviously shocked Pastor Jonathan Parnell who called the noisy intrusion ‘unacceptable and shameful.’ What followed wasn’t an interview, but a condescending and belligerent dressing-down,” he wrote.

“Lemon appeared on a leftist podcast and described the members of the church as ‘entitled white supremacists,’ as if that somehow justified an attack on them. It is not just a despicable remark, but it suggests that the congregants were taunted because of their race, which could qualify as a hate crime,” he added.




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