This Journalist Was Arrested, Strip-Searched, and Jailed for Filming Police. Will He Get Justice?
Justin Pulliam's arrest and lawsuit once again demand we ask if "real" journalists are entitled to a different set of rights.

Prosecutors in Texas last week dismissed the criminal case against a journalist who, in 2021, was arrested, strip-searched, and jailed for filming police. But his lengthy legal battle is in some sense just beginning and once again demands we probe the idea that real journalists are entitled to a different set of rights than the public.
That's because Justin Pulliam, the man in question, is a citizen journalist. He is not employed by an outlet. Rather, he publishes his reporting to his YouTube channel, Corruption Report, which, true to its name, is unapologetically skeptical of state power and supportive of transparency.
The Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office (FBSCO) has allegedly been vexed by his audacity. In July 2021, Pulliam was expelled by police from a press conference because they alleged he did not qualify as media, and in December of that same year, he was arrested for videoing police at a mental health call, despite that he had stationed himself about 130 feet away from the interaction. Officer Taylor Rollins demanded Pulliam move back even further, and he obliged, although he continued to film the deputy speaking to other bystanders at the scene (none of whom were arrested).
That didn't end well for Pulliam, who was charged with interfering with police duties. (According to his complaint, Officer Ricky Rodriguez, who assisted with the arrest, told another cop at the jail that the ordeal would teach Pulliam a lesson "for fucking with us.") In April 2023, a jury was not able to reach a verdict in the case, with five jurors wanting to acquit and one urging to convict. It took law enforcement more than a year to decide not to pursue the case further.
One wonders if the Fort Bend government is smartly allocating resources in support of public safety when it doggedly went after a case because someone filmed them. Yet at a deeper level, it's worth asking if law enforcement would have taken the case to trial at all had Pulliam worked for a formal media outlet. My guess is no.
It is difficult to reconcile those two things. Journalism is, after all, an activity, consisting of collecting information and reporting it to the public. That venture is not exclusively available to people working at a full-time newsgathering organization, and the strength of the First Amendment should not hinge on whether or not you are on a media outlet's payroll. Even if Pulliam didn't consider himself a journalist at all—citizen or otherwise—his right to film the government employees he pays with his taxes should remain intact. It certainly shouldn't come at the expense of his freedom.
Whether or not he will be able to make that case before a jury in civil court is yet to be determined. Last June, Judge David Hittner of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas allowed Pulliam's federal lawsuit to proceed, declining to award the defendants qualified immunity, the legal doctrine that shields state and local government actors from such claims if their alleged misconduct was not already "clearly established" in the law.
"The Individual Defendants assert no case law to support their proposition that an indictment precludes a claim for first amendment infringement," wrote Hittner. "Indeed, based on the facts alleged in the complaint, it appears Pulliam was singled out and arrested for exercising his rights under the First Amendment."
Pulliam, however, is not in the clear. He will next have to convince the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which has considered a similar case in recent months: that of Priscilla Villarreal, the citizen journalist in Laredo, Texas, who police arrested in 2017 using an obscure statute criminalizing the solicitation of nonpublic information if there is the "intent to obtain a benefit." If that description sounds a lot like standard journalism—seeking information not yet public—that's because it is. But despite attracting some strange bedfellows in her defense, Villarreal has not fared well in court.
While her case is not identical to Pulliam's, they both raise very similar questions, particularly as it relates to the idea that a certain class of journalists should get more rights than others. "Villarreal and others portray her as a martyr for the sake of journalism," wrote Judge Edith Jones in her majority opinion dismissing Villarreal's suit and giving qualified immunity to the police. "That is inappropriate," according to Jones, because Villarreal, who posts her reporting to her popular Facebook page Lagordiloca, is not a "mainstream, legitimate media outlet." Her free speech rights are suffering as a result.
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we ask if "real" journalists are entitled to a different set of rights.
Fuck no.
The problem with the constitution is that they never anticipated how evil and stupid people would get.
The constitution was writen for moral and religious men
Indeed
Moral men like Ben Franklin? Religious men like Thomas Jefferson?
That's pretty odd given how corrupt the framers were, and humans in general.
Yeah, but what about “unreal” journalists, “reality” journalists, “guerilla” journalists, “amateur” journalists, “non-conventional” journalists, “activist” journalists, “lifestyle” journalists, “Great Barrington” journalists, and "NSA Whistleblower" journalists?
Are we plebs just supposed to assume that all these journalists broadly belong, undifferentiated, to the same class of people? How are we to know otherwise if Reason, FIRE, and Binion don’t tell us?
Apparently, if you identify as a journalist, you are a journalist.
Works for me. If you provide information to the general public about topics of public interest, you're a journalist.
If you provide highly biased information where you ignore inconvenient facts and even publish outright falsehoods, you're just a shitty journalist (and possibly a New York Times reporter).
How else can you restrict the rights of the average Joe and give special privileges to an elite class?
Fuck no and to top it off how can this guy interfere with anything if he is more than 100ft away? That cop who arrested him should be thrown off the force.
Most Libertarian state in America.
Most corrupt state in America.
Texas? Most Libertarian? By whose definition?
Sounds like fat boy wants special privileges.
Taking pictures and-or asking questions is now a "special privilege" in the eyes of right-wing wrong-nuts!!! Why am I not surprised?
Well, they are defending cops. They will go to some crazy extremes to defend a cop.
Grip yourself. Supporting police does not include standing by when they do something stupid like arrest a guy who is over 100ft away for interference.
Seriously? Special as in how? He was filming and asked to step back so did to the tune of 100 or more feet then was still arrested. Doesn't sound like a special privilege to comply with a police order and still get arrested for standing around.
Indeed. He obviously pissed off a few cops who didn't like being recorded.
But then neither do the leftists who riot, loot and burn wearing face masks.
While her case is not identical to Pulliam's, they both raise very similar questions, particularly as it relates to the idea that a certain class of journalists should get more rights than others.
Do we mean "class" in the pink-haired vs. non-descript white guy class, the pulling info from a cop friend vs. working independently class, the muckraking, doxxing, and agitating cops vs. actually exposing corruption class, the got her day in court and was rebuffed vs. may not even get his day in court class, the gets six stories in Reason vs. gets one, maybe two class, the one who gets defended by FIRE vs. the one who doesn't class?
Because as a member of neither class of journalist, I'm going to need you to clarify it beyond just "not identical" and "it's similar" for me.
This Journalist Was Arrested, Strip-Searched, and Jailed for Filming Police. Will He Get Justice?
Sounds like he already got him some justice. /Charlie Murphy
"Journalism is, after all, an activity, consisting of collecting information and reporting it to the public. That venture is not exclusively available to people working at a full-time newsgathering organization, and the strength of the First Amendment should not hinge on whether or not you are on a media outlet's payroll."
Finally!
Next steps: sounds like at least someone at Reason is getting close to the realization that all those antifa rioters that slapped a velcro 'PRESS' patch on their black bloc apparel during the summer of 2020 were not engaging in 1st Amendment activities, either.
Sounds like he already got him some justice.
Bet you he won't come over here and disrespect like that again.
CHARLIE MURPHY!
Wait until Billy finds out about what happened to the J6 journalists who were unaffiliated with the regime.
I bet he'll be outraged, right?...
Right guys?
Don’t fear the revolt!
(insurrection)!
All our times have come
Here, but now they’re gone
Seasons don’t fear the revolt
Nor do the wind, the sun, or the rain
(We can be like they are)
Come on, baby
(Don’t fear the revolt)
Baby, take my hand
(Don’t fear the revolt)
We’ll be able to fly
Baby, I’m your man
La, la la, la la
La, la la, la la
Valentine is done
Here but now they’re gone
Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbs
Are together in eternity
(Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbitt)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_Wessel
Horst and Babbs both wanted to grab political power through violence, and got back, what they were dishing out. Karma is a bitch! Live by the sword, die by the sword!
Refute it, bitch!
Can you show us where Ashli Babbitt touched you.
Failure to express sufficient outrage at X equals praise for Y.
Poor sarc
Sometimes, yes. Especially if it involves a matter that's part of the magazine's mission.
Cops hate cameras and audio/visual recording devices. One should always expect a very negative and totally illegal responce. After all, you can't have a police state without police.
That’s because Justin Pulliam, the man in question, is a citizen journalist.
When you use the term “Citizen Journalist” are you using it in the way we often hear you use “Sex Worker”: A category of worker that should be morally judged like any other worker, no different than someone who makes coffee at the Starbucks counter, or a guy working on a construction crew, but legally judged in a special category that allows them to refuse to do their jobs when they aren’t like, really feeling it, man?
If you’re not, then perhaps you might pivot to the term “independent journalist”.
Edit: "Citizen Journalist" makes it sound like there's a military arm of journalism, and then a bunch of guys on youtube making run-and-gun videos in tactical gear, who've never served a day in their lives.
The police just needed to have Robert DeNiro show up and help campaign for a conviction.
Jesus, that was unhinged wasn't it.
Maybe it was the coke talking.
Yeah, amoung a mass of Hollywood lunatics he stands out as their king.
I wonder what Aela would think about the situation?
The legacy media are dead. Their owners by now must be corporate shells that a citizen journalist could acquire at trivial cost. How's that for a workaround?
Indeed. I gave up on the MSM 25 years ago when they were simply mouth pieces for Pres. Chaney and his gangsters. They are nothing more than pencil necked hacks, spewing nothing but leftist propaganda.
We are all one.
Journalists are not a protected class.
(only the elites (D) get special treatment)
Sigh. You did this for like two months with that fat chick with the stupid hair. Now this chinless guy too?
That's because Justin Pulliam, the man in question, is a citizen journalist.
That's it. I'm done. Where's the Inigo Montoya meme?
Having a smartphone and a social media account does not magically make you a journalist. Not unless you think every vapid influencer and only fans star is a "citizen journalist" too (I suppose they work for the culture and entertainment section?).
You are, once again, confusing "citizen journalist" with "concerned citizen." Pulliam is a concerned citizen (and probably some kind of activist). Waving a smartphone around while he expresses his concerns does not magically turn that content into "reporting" or "news" - nor does it suddenly turn what he's doing into Freedom of the Press.
What he's doing is a liberty that should be protected, to be sure - but not under 1A Press. Because he's NOT a journalist in the way 1A was intended to protect. He's a narrative peddler. (But, in fairness, that's true for most "journalists" (or "JoUrNaLiSts lol") these days. And yes, I doubt there's many at Reason. Maybe Zach and Veronica. And Stossel, sure - but I don't really count him as a regular voice around here. Like he does his own thing, and CC's reason with a "ok to reprint" attached.)
"Press" in the 1st Amendment refers to the PRINTING PRESS, not journalists.
Journalists should not be entitled to any special privileges. Those protections should be extended to ANYBODY addressing the public about government affairs and, to a lesser extent, other matters of public interest, regardless of how biased their perspective may be. If they slander a public official, we already have laws in place to deal with such behavior.
I'll bet you think "Bear Arms" in the 2nd Amendment refers muskets and cannons too, huh. Or possibly ursine appendages?
Congrats, pretty sure that's a totally ass-backward interpretation of Kyol 's post. After reading your next post, I'll change that to completely sure. You're the one arguing for a stupidly outdated and limited definition. And yes, freedom of speech and the press are effectively the same thing. The only difference is the medium. The whole point is that the state doesn't get to pick and choose whose statements are legit, whether they're spoken aloud or written down.
And yes, freedom of speech and the press are effectively the same thing.
And yet you just distinguished them.
Think on that a bit, and then come back to me.
Is English your third language after incoherent grunting noises and loud howling at the moon? Did you drop out of school after kindergarten or did you make it all the way to first grade before turning to Daily Wire and Blaze for all your educational needs?
Pretty sure both of those would be a better source of education than what is offered in public schools.
At the very least, there wouldn't be any LGBT pedo porn or blue-haired rainbow-wearing enablers that exist for the sole purpose of grooming children.
But no, I actually don't frequent either of those sites. Why, do you?
And since you're here, maybe you'd like the answer the question all these other cowards avoided. (But don't worry, I'm not holding my breath in expectation of you doing so. Because you're just like any other run-of-the-mill Marxist. Now get that head deep into the sand, boy!)
Doesn't have to be a journalist to be protected by the 1st amendment. God forbid he's an activist. You're an idiot.
Read to the end before firing off that next hot take, Sal. Quote: What he’s doing is a liberty that should be protected, to be sure – but not under 1A Press. Because he’s NOT a journalist in the way 1A was intended to protect.
Look, 1A Press recognizes that there is something unique to journalists/the press (ACTUAL journalists/press - those who adhere to professional standards in investigation and reporting) that affords them unique protections (namely, confidentialities and certain information access that laymen don't have, as well as shield laws). To qualify for a shield law, you almost unilaterally have to be affiliated with a recognized news/wire/broadcasting organization (though freelancers usually count too). A yahoo with a youtube page is decidedly NOT that. And when not clearly affiliated, when someone claims shield law protection under 1A Press, the Courts will invariably look at their standards of practice. If it's comparable to that of a professional journalist, that usually holds water ("citizen journalist"). If it's some guy butting into active crime scenes and ignoring police commands because he's a known agitator with a youtube page which clearly has an axe to grind ("concerned citizen") - no.
Journalists don't stalk cops like paparazzi hoping to catch them in some moment that they can exploit, with bias, for their own personal agenda. Those are the exact opposite of professional standards to which journalists are held. "Freedom of the Press," necessarily has a definition of "the Press" - and it's not "anyone conveying information."
This is why there's a clear distinction between a journalist and say, a blogger (though some blogs evolve to meet standards of journalism) or content creator. (Or, pre-net, writer or commentator.) This quasi-Marxist effort to redefine "journalist" and water it down so much that it effectively applies to everyone in any situation without consideration as to what they're doing (or, perhaps more importantly, what they're NOT doing) is dumb.
Why even have Freedom of the Press enumerated as a Constitutional Right if you think it effectively is just a synonym for Freedom of Speech?
Jebus Crow, study some history. The American founders and the framers of the Constitution and especially the 1A were a bunch of "agitators" with their own agenda to advance. Or at least I'm pretty sure that's how officers of the British Crown might have described them. The difference between "speech" and "press" was that written or printed material could be reproduced and spread much wore widely than spoken material at a time before audio or video recording. It didn't aim to create some magical protected class while leaving the disfavored out in the cold.
I didn't say it created some magical protected class. I said that 1A recognizes a difference between someone who is in the business of providing news according to certain journalistic standards, vs some rando citizen just running his mouth about whatever.
It wasn't about "technology available at the time." Or, is your argument that 1A is obsolete and its breakdown into categories is no longer relevant?
There's pretty much no exercise of state power that AT won't bend over backwards to defend. At this point they've bent so far over backwards their head has long since disappeared up their own ass.
Untrue.
And this has nothing to do with "state power."
This has to do with the laughable notion that chinless charlie up there is a "citizen journalist." That's ludicrous. Same goes for purple hair petunia and her Facebook page.
But I get why Reason wants to characterize them as such. (Spoiler alert: it's because they're not really libertarians.)
Having a smartphone and a social media account does not magically make you a journalist
Nor does the first amendment specifically require that someone be a journalist. In the phrase, "Freedom of the press", "press" is effectively metonymous for anyone who wishes to publish anything, regardless of their professional status.
See above.
Also, "wishes to publish anything." If I roll my eyes any harder, my retinas will detach.
So, the only fans chick filming her homemade porno for simps - she's a journalist too now?
Hey, I literally just published a thing. I'm a journalist now! So are you! We're all magically journalists because we published something!
Derp. DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP.
The 1A doesn't say jack about journalists. Yes, it protects even your right to spew idiocy. I'll see your "DERP" and raise you a "DUH!"
You didn’t answer the question.
Is the only fans chick publishing her self-made porno now a journalist, as you’ve defined the term?
Am I a journalist for posting this? Are you a journalist for replying? We're both actively publishing something, as you've defined the term.
Now... About that State-Surveillance.....
Oh yeah; The disparity really isn't with journalist versus citizen.
The disparity is between citizens and politicians.
The MSM has become a pale shadow of its former self. There is no journalism anymore, to speak of. It's now all about activism even if it means distorting facts and obfuscating the truth, which they do on a daily basis.
Pencil necked hacks like Jim Acosta and Joe Scarborough along with every so called news channel have disgraced themselves to the point where there is no way to salvage their reputations. CNN, MSNBC, Fox, CBS, ABC and NBC are nearly worthless, MSNBC's The View is more than a joke, made up of low IQ female hyenas screeching at their audience.
Citizen journalism is now about to take over and the MSM should be allowed to die.