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Guardian journalist acquitted of charges during 2016 DAPL protest

MANDAN, N.D. - One year after her arrest, the first journalist charged in connection to last year's pipeline protests went to trial Wednesday, Oct. 18, where she was acquitted.Sara Lafleur-Vetter was filming for The Guardian, a London-based news ...

Sara Lafleur-Vetter, middle, a photojournalist and filmmaker for London-based The Guardian, talks with her attorney, Amanda Harris, right, in a Morton County courtroom in Mandan during Lafleur-Vetter's trial for three misdemeanors related to the Dakota Access Pipeline protest on Oct. 22, 2016, in Morton County. On the left is a co-defendant Tyrale Spotted Bear. Mike McCleary / Bismarck Tribune
Sara Lafleur-Vetter, middle, a photojournalist and filmmaker for London-based The Guardian, talks with her attorney, Amanda Harris, right, in a Morton County courtroom in Mandan during Lafleur-Vetter's trial for three misdemeanors related to the Dakota Access Pipeline protest on Oct. 22, 2016, in Morton County. On the left is a co-defendant Tyrale Spotted Bear. Mike McCleary / Bismarck Tribune

MANDAN, N.D. - One year after her arrest, the first journalist charged in connection to last year's pipeline protests went to trial Wednesday, Oct. 18, where she was acquitted.

Sara Lafleur-Vetter was filming for The Guardian, a London-based news outlet, when she was arrested on Oct. 22, 2016. After a daylong misdemeanor court trial with four other co-defendants, Southeast District Court Judge Thomas Merrick dismissed her misdemeanor charges of physical obstruction of a government function, disobedience of safety orders during a riot and disorderly conduct.

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Defense attorney Amanda Harris motioned for a Rule 29 judgment of acquittal after the court heard testimony from several law enforcement throughout the day.

"There's no evidence against her. All it shows is she was working," Merrick said, referencing still images of Lafleur-Vetter with cameras and equipment. "She was out there working."

Lafleur-Vetter, the only defendant from Wednesday to have all their charges dropped, said Merrick's decision shocked her. She also said media in the courtroom and her journalist credentials may have helped, but left her with a survivor's guilt.

"As a journalist, I have a lot of resources and people who vouch for me, while my co-defendants do not," she said.

Lafleur-Vetter identified herself as a journalist upon arrest, Harris said. At least 10 journalists were arrested in connection to the Dakota Access Pipeline protests.

"A journalist is publishing work with a publication that is respected and used as a resource for information in their community," Lafleur-Vetter said.

She had previously been charged with misdemeanor criminal trespass and engaging in a riot, later dismissed, but recharged.

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Harris said that legal wrangling demonstrates a kind of "financial warfare" against defendants.

"This is the fourth time she's been to North Dakota to have her day in court," Harris said, adding that The Weather Channel has been missing Lafleur-Vetter covering California wildfires due to her trial.

Lafleur-Vetter said she hopes to get back to covering the fires now that she's been acquitted. She also plans to file for a return of property for the eight SD cards seized in her arrest a year ago.

During a trial recess, attorney Andrea Carter, of the Water Protector Legal Collective, said journalists present a unique case in mass arrest events.

"Obviously, there's concerns whenever journalists are arrested because they're not necessarily participating in a demonstration or a certain action," she said, adding that in Lafleur-Vetter's case, "everybody was just herded and treated as a group."

North Dakota Highway Patrol Capt. Bryan Niewind and Bismarck Police Lt. Jason Stugelmeyer each testified they did not distinguish journalists in arrests or attempt to do so.

Lafleur-Vetter will be the only co-defendant to not return to trial when it reconvenes 9:15 a.m. Thursday. Merrick did dismissed one or two charges each against the other four defendants, who are Edward Bad Hand, Mary Redway, Alexander Simon and Tyrale Spotted Bear.

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About 830 criminal cases sprang from the pipeline protests. Over half have now closed, with most charges dismissed.

Sara Lafleur-Vetter, middle, a photojournalist and filmmaker for London-based The Guardian, talks with her attorney, Amanda Harris, right, in a Morton County courtroom in Mandan during Lafleur-Vetter's trial for three misdemeanors related to the Dakota Access Pipeline protest on Oct. 22, 2016, in Morton County. On the left is a co-defendant Tyrale Spotted Bear. Mike McCleary / Bismarck Tribune
During a trial involving five defendants on Wednesday, Oct. 8, in Mandan, Morton County Assistant State's Attorney Brian Grosinger, middle, takes photographs to the defendant's table related to an Oct. 22, 2016, incident in Morton County involving Dakota Access Pipeline protesters and law enforcement. In the background is Southeast District Court Judge Thomas E. Merrick. Mike McCleary / Bismarck Tribune

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