Students will be disciplined for ICE walkouts despite Florida state guidance

A day after the school board chair and superintendent of Brevard, Florida, warned thatstudents who participated in walkouts against Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions would be punished, Florida's education commissioner sent out guidance on handling the issue.

USA TODAY

"The Florida Department of Education recently received correspondence from members of the Florida legislature regarding reports of organized student protest activity occurring during the school day," Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas said in a letter issued Feb. 3 to Florida school districts. "I want to thank them for bringing this matter to my attention and for their leadership in elevating concerns related to student safety, instructional time, and the appropriate role of public schools."

He didn't specify which district the reports came from, but the letter came about 24 hours after posts about walkouts at high schools throughout Brevard began circulating online, prompting both School Board Chair Matt Susin and Superintendent Mark Rendell to warn students that if they participated, they would face discipline.

"While students may express their views in appropriate, lawful ways outside of the school day and off school property, disruptions to learning and campus operations will not be tolerated," Susin said in a statement posted to Brevard Public Schools' website.

Both Susin and Rendell said the walkouts were not affiliated with the district.

The letter won't change how the district will respond to walkouts, said Janet Murnaghan, chief strategic communications officer for BPS.

"Yesterday, Superintendent Dr. Mark Rendell shared a letter with families outlining the district's expectations," Murnaghan said in an email to FLORIDA TODAY. "As noted in that communication, walkouts during the instructional day are not permitted, and standard attendance and disciplinary policies will apply."

Here's what Kamoutsas said.

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Students have rights but may still be disciplined

Kamoutsas reminded educators and leaders that they "carry a responsibility to safeguard instructional time;" keep campuses safe; and follow the law, Board of Education rules and school board policies.

Still, he added that students have a constitutional right to free expression, adding that this includes the ability to participate in peaceful protests if "such expression complies with applicable law and school district policy."

"Any student whose actions are to the contrary should be appropriately disciplined," he said. "Districts have a responsibility to ensure that any protest activity does not interrupt instructional time, school operations and campus safety."

He went on to say that adults may not encourage, promote, organize or otherwise facilitate student participation in protests during the school day, and that conduct that distracts or undermines instruction could warrant discipline.

Additionally, he cited a Florida Board of Education rule that requires educators to "take reasonable precautions to distinguish between personal views and those of any educational institution or organization with which the individual is affiliated."

Addressing parents, he encouraged families to have conversations with students about the "importance of not allowing civic engagement to detract from time in the classroom."

Finch Walker is the education reporter at FLORIDA TODAY. Contact Walker atfwalker@floridatoday.com. X:@_finchwalker.

This article originally appeared on Florida Today:Florida's education head sends guidance on ICE protests

Students will be disciplined for ICE walkouts despite Florida state guidance

A day after the school board chair and superintendent of Brevard, Florida, warned thatstudents who participated in walkou...
Family Saves Baby from Burning Building by Lowering Car Seat from Second Floor Window

A family saved a baby from a burning building in Milwaukee on Sunday, Feb. 1

People Front right of Fire Engine setting up for a structure fire. Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Neighbor Anthone Medina waited on the ground to catch the baby as he was lowered to safety in a car seat carrier held up by what appeared to be a tow strap

  • The Milwaukee Fire Department saved eight people from the building, which reportedly had no sprinklers built in to fight fires

A family saved a baby from a burning building in an unconventional way in Milwaukee on Sunday, Feb. 1.

The Milwaukee Fire Department responded to the scene as the infant was lowered to safety in a car seat carrier held up by what appeared to be a tow strap, local ABC affiliateWXOWreported. "We knew there were a lot of people potentially still inside. We had people hanging from outside of windows," Milwaukee Fire Department Battalion Chief Nickolas Trost told the outlet.

The fire happened occurred near 77th and Green Tree Avenue,ABC 7 Chicagoreports. Neighbor Anthone Medina told the outlet that he assisted in the rescue, waiting on the ground to catch the baby as the flames grew.

"Since they didn't arrive immediately, we tried to save the baby's life by lowering him down with a blanket to get him to safety," Medina told ABC 7 in an interview translated from Spanish to English.

ABC 7 reports that the building had no sprinklers, citing the MFD.

Two people suffered leg injuries after jumping from the building, WXOW reports, citing the MFD.

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"The heaviest part of the fire was on the first floor, in the hallway. That was a big part of this story," Trost told WXOW, while noting that residents had to use alternate escape routes due to the size of the fire. Firefighters rescued eight people, all who are expected to survive, per the outlet.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Dramatic cell phone video footage obtained by local ABC affiliateWISNshowed heavy smoke filling the building. The bulk of the fire began on the first floor, the outlet reports.

Milwaukee Fire Chief Aaron Lipski told ABC 7 Chicago that several city departments are actively working to create a database that will notify dispatchers of which buildings do not have sprinkler systems to fight fires.

PEOPLE has reached out to the MFD for further comment, and the cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Read the original article onPeople

Family Saves Baby from Burning Building by Lowering Car Seat from Second Floor Window

A family saved a baby from a burning building in Milwaukee on Sunday, Feb. 1 NEED TO KNOW Neighbor Anthone Med...
How First Amendment rights collided in a Minnesota church

At least three rights protected under the First Amendment clashed in recent days as protesters and journalists,including former CNN anchor Don Lemon, were arrested in connection with a Minnesota church protest.

Lemonwas one of several journalists in attendance at the Jan. 18 protest of Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. Demonstratorsentered the church during a service, alleging that one of the church's pastors, David Easterwood, worked for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Videos of the protest showed demonstrators chanting "ICE out" and lead pastor Jonathan Parnell shouting, "Shame on you, this is the house of God and we are worshipping."

In a nearlyseven-hour livestreamon his YouTube channel, Lemon spoke with congregation members, protesters and one of the church's pastors.

Demonstrators have a right to assemble and exercise free speech. Journalists are allowed to cover newsworthy events. But churchgoers are also guaranteed the right to practice their religion.

"I think you could teach a course on constitutional law from all the things that have happened in Minneapolis in the last month," saidThomas Berg, a professor at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in Minneapolis.

First, federal agents flooded the state in what PresidentDonald Trump's administration has referred to asthe "largest immigration operation ever."

ThenICE agent Jonathan Rossshot andkilled 37-year-old Renee Nicole Goodin Minneapolis on Jan. 7, followed by Border Patrol shooting andkilling 37-year-old Alex Prettion Jan. 24. Bothshootings prompted massive protests.

The arrests of Lemon and independent journalist Georgia Fort for their coverage of the church demonstration came less than a week after Pretti's death.

"Every one of the five freedoms of the First Amendment are in play on the streets of Minneapolis right now," saidKen Paulson, director of Middle Tennessee State University'sFree Speech Centerand former USA TODAY editor in chief.

Line between First Amendment rights, impeding federal operations

TheTrump administration has maintainedthat its actions in the state do not threaten First Amendment rights.

Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the U.S. Constitution "protects speech and peaceful assembly – not rioting" in a statement to USA TODAY on Feb. 3.

"DHS is taking appropriate and constitutional measures to uphold the rule of law and protect our officers and the public from dangerous rioters," McLaughlin said. "We remind the public that rioting is dangerous – obstructing law enforcement is a federal crime and assaulting law enforcement is a felony."

Attorney GeneralPam Bondisaidin a Jan. 8 social media postthat peaceful protest is a "sacred American right protected by the First Amendment" but that it is a federal crime to impede or attack federal law enforcement or damage federal property.

On the same day, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanchewrote in partthat law enforcement officials are not required to "gamble with their lives in the face of a serious threat of harm."

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told USA TODAY on Feb. 3 that the administration "is committed to protecting all Americans' First Amendment freedoms - whether that be worshipping in church or protesting in the streets."

At the same time, she said, those who impede federal operations or otherwise break the law "will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law."

Several of those who werearrested in connection with the church protesthavedescribed their prosecutions as politically motivated.

Freedom of the Press

A slew ofpress freedom groups condemned the arrestsof Lemon and Fort, both of whom cited the First Amendment in defense of their reporting.

"The First Amendment of the Constitution protects that work for me and for countless other journalists who do what I do," Lemon told reporters outside the courthouse where he had his initial appearance,according to Politico. "I stand with all of them and I will not be silenced."

Invideo posted on her Facebook pageon Jan. 30, Fort said agents were at her door over her coverage and that she was advised by her attorney to go with them.

"I don't feel like I have my First Amendment right as a member of the press," she said.

Press freedom is not an unlimited right, and journalists are not immune from legal repercussions if they break the law in pursuing the news, experts said.

It wouldn't be unheard of for a journalist to face a trespassing charge, for example, but they said such charges are typically issued by state and local governments. It is much more unusual, they said, for the federal government to get involved.

"This is like unleashing the U.S. Army when a ... hometown patrolman could do the job," Paulson said.

He sees a "clear parallel" between the press freedom questions involved in the matter and the legal precedent that journalists generally have the right to publish classified information.

"The journalists are not breaking the law, they are accessing the information they need to share with their audience," Paulson said of the Minnesota case.

It would be harder to argue that the journalists had a First Amendment right to report on the church protest if they were found to have been collaborating with the protesters, as federal prosecutors have alleged, Berg said.

Still, the administration's actions against Lemon and Fort seem "beyond the pale," saidKatie Fallow, deputy litigation director at the Knight First Amendment Institute.

They are "part and parcel of the numerous actions by the Trump administration to curtail press freedom and target disfavored journalists," she said.

Freedom of Religion

Those who were worshiping at Cities Church when the service was disrupted also have a First Amendment right to practice their religion.

The Trump administration has also invoked theFreedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act of 1994in its efforts to prosecute journalists covering the protest.

Among other actions, the law makes illegal "intentionally injuring, intimidating or interfering with" a person attempting to seek or provide services at a reproductive health facility or place of worship. It specifies, however, that the act should not be used to "prohibit any expressive conduct – including peaceful picketing or other peaceful demonstration" protected by the First Amendment.

Trump's White House has accused past administrations ofusing the law to target religious Americans.

Days after taking office for the second time, Trump pardoned nearly two dozenanti-abortion activists. The group included individuals charged withconspiring to storm a reproductive health clinicin Washington in October 2020.  Amongtheir charges were violationsof the FACE Act.

Trump's Department of Justicealso invoked the law in its lawsuitsagainst those involved in a Pro-Palestinian demonstration outside a New Jersey synagogue in 2024.

Freedom of Speech

While the demonstrators involved in the protest have the right to free speech, "there's no First Amendment right to disrupt activities on private property," including a church, Berg said.

Experts pointed to other elements of the ongoing developments in Minnesota that implicate the freedom of speech.

There's the Trump administration's reportedinvestigation into Minnesota Gov. Tim Walzand Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey in relation to a suspected conspiracy to impede federal immigration enforcement, as well as numerousclashes between federal agents and protesters.

Law enforcement's response to protests in the area "sends a chilling message to others to not engage in that kind of conduct because you might get arrested or beaten up or maybe even killed," Fallow said.

<p style=Former CNN Anchor Don Lemon has been arrested on Jan. 29, 2026, days after being present at a protest inside a Minneapolis Church. Don Lemon (left) speaks with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), following a press conference alongside alleged victims of Jeffrey Epstein at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, on September 3, 2025.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Don Lemon attends the 2022 CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Tim Malone (left) and Don Lemon attend the 2023 Center Dinner at Cipriani Wall Street on April 13 in New York. Mindy Kaling (from left), Kate Hudson, Katie Holmes, Alan Cumming and Don Lemon sit front row at Michael Kors' fall/winter 2023 runway show on Feb. 15, 2023, during Fashion Week in New York. Kaitlan Collins (from left), Don Lemon and Poppy Harlow attend CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute on Dec. 11, 2022, in New York. Don Lemon and his mother, Katherine Lemon, attend the Don Lemon and Brooke Baldwin attend CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute at the American Museum of Natural History on Dec. 17, 2017, in New York. Don Lemon (left) and CNN political commentator Van Jones at the GLAAD Gala at City View at Metreon on Sept. 9, 2017, in San Francisco. Andrew Rannells (from left), Debra Messing and Don Lemon pose backstage at the 28th annual GLAAD Media Awards at The Hilton Midtown on May 6, 2017, in New York. Teddy Davis (from left), Noah Gray, Don Lemon, Jim Acosta, Brianna Keilar, Suzanne Malveaux, Jake Tapper and Dana Bash of CNN attend the White House Correspondents' Dinner at DAR Constitution Hall on April 29, 2017, in Washington. Don Lemon takes a sefie with a photo of himself during The Hollywood Reporter's 35 Most Powerful People in Media event at The Pool on April 13, 2017, in New York. Don Lemon (from left), Kate Bolduan, John Berman and Joey Jackson attend CNN's

Former CNN host Don Lemon arrested. See his career in photos

Former CNN Anchor Don Lemon hasbeen arrestedon Jan. 29, 2026, days after being present at a protest inside a Minneapolis Church. Don Lemon (left) speaks with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), following a press conference alongside alleged victims of Jeffrey Epstein at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, on September 3, 2025.

Courts will decide

Ultimately, the legal system will be responsible for determining whether and to what extent various parties violated the law through their actions in Minnesota.

"Courts are not a perfect forum, but they're the best place we have for sorting out people's competing assertions and basing the decision on the facts as best we can understand them," Berg, the law professor, said.

Paulson, who runs the First Amendment center, said the events in Minnesota have fostered a "renewed understanding of the importance of the First Amendment and the role it plays in keeping this country free."

"It's been a refresher for more than 300 million people," he said.

Contributing: Michael Loria and Natalie Neysa Alund

BrieAnna Frank is a First Amendment reporter at USA TODAY. Reach her atbjfrank@usatoday.com.

USA TODAY's coverage of First Amendment issues is funded through a collaboration between the Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.Funders do not provide editorial input.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:First Amendment rights collide with protest in a Minnesota church

How First Amendment rights collided in a Minnesota church

At least three rights protected under the First Amendment clashed in recent days as protesters and journalists,including ...
Fifteen migrants died off Greece after boat collision with coast guard

ATHENS, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Fifteen migrants died in the Aegean Sea off Greece on Tuesday after their boat collided with a coast guard ​vessel off the island of Chios, the coast guard said.

A coastguard ‌official said they spotted a dingy transporting migrants towards Chios, which lies a few miles off the ‌coast of Turkey, and ordered them to turn back.

"The smugglers manoeuvred toward the coast guard vessel causing a collision," the official told Reuters.

The coast guard said 25 migrants were rescued but one of them, a woman, later died. A search and rescue ⁠operation was ongoing.

Reuters was ‌unable to independently verify how the collision occurred. The nationality of the migrants was not clear.

Two coast guard officers were injured ‍and transferred to hospital, a second official told Reuters. Witnesses reported that about 30-35 people were on board, a government official said.

Greece, in the southeast corner of the European Union, ​has long been a favoured gateway to Europe for migrants and refugees from ‌the Middle East, Africa and Asia.

In 2015-2016, Greece was at the frontline of Europe's migration crisis and nearly one million people landed on its islands, including Chios, from Turkey.

In recent years, arrivals have dropped and Greece has toughened its stance on migrants. Since 2019, the centre-right government has reinforced border controls with ⁠fences and sea patrols.

Greece has come under scrutiny ​for its treatment of migrants and refugees approaching ​by sea, including one shipwreck in 2023 in which hundreds of migrants died after what witnesses said was the coastguard's attempt to tow ‍their trawler.

The EU border ⁠agency said last year that it was reviewing 12 cases of potential human rights violations by Greece, including some allegations migrants seeking asylum were ⁠pushed back from Greece's frontiers.

Greece denies that it violates human rights or that it forcefully ‌returns asylum seekers from its shores.

(Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas, Yannis Souliotis ‌and Renne Maltezou; Editing by Edward McAllister)

Fifteen migrants died off Greece after boat collision with coast guard

ATHENS, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Fifteen migrants died in the Aegean Sea off Greece on Tuesday after their boat collided with a ...
Assassin of Japan's former PM Abe appeals life sentence

TOKYO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A Japanese man has appealed against his life sentence for fatally ​shooting former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a district ‌court spokesperson said on Wednesday.

Tetsuya Yamagami, 45, sent shockwaves through Japan ‌after he shot and killed its longest-serving prime minister with a homemade gun in July 2022, while Abe was delivering a campaign speech in the western ⁠city of Nara.

"An appeal ‌was filed," said the spokesperson. The Osaka High Court will review the appeal.

Yamagami, who ‍admitted to killing Abe, was handed a life term by the court last month, in line with prosecutors' demands, ​though his defence had sought no more than ‌20 years, citing family issues linked to the Unification Church.

Media have quoted Yamagami as telling the court he held a grudge against the Unification Church after his mother's large donations to it caused financial hardship ⁠for the family.

He took out ​his anger on Abe after ​the former prime minister had sent a video message to an event organised by a ‍church affiliate, media ⁠added.

Founded in South Korea in 1954, the Unification Church is famed for its mass weddings and ⁠counts Japanese followers as a key source of income.

(Reporting by ‌Kiyoshi Takenaka and Kaori Kaneko; Editing by ‌Himani Sarkar and Clarence Fernandez)

Assassin of Japan's former PM Abe appeals life sentence

TOKYO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A Japanese man has appealed against his life sentence for fatally ​shooting former Prime Ministe...

 

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