Georgia Fort
Georgia Ellyse Fort is an American independent journalist operating in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area. She has been covering the ongoing protests in that area against ICE raids and the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Along with Don Lemon, she was arrested on federal charges on January 30, 2026 as a result of their reporting of a protest at a church.
Background
Fort is from St. Paul, Minnesota, and attended high school there. She graduated from the University of St. Thomas in 2010, and then moved to Georgia. Fort was a reporter at WTVM in Columbus, Georgia from 2015 to 2017. She also worked at radio station WFXE at that time. In 2017, Fort worked as a morning news anchor for KBJR in Superior, Wisconsin, which serves the Duluth, Minnesota media market. She returned to St. Paul in 2018 and worked as a freelancer for local outlets such as Unicorn Riot.She covered the murder of George Floyd in 2020 and the trial of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who was convicted of that killing in 2021. Her newsroom operation is called BLCK Press.
In 2025, Fort won a two year fellowship from the Bush Foundation "to pursue executive education and continue building a journalism ecosystem that affirms community, develops talent and ensures that all voices are seen and heard." As of January of 2026, she has over 137,000 people following her on Facebook and also about 70,000 on Instagram. She has been nominated for 12 regional Emmy Awards, winning three of them.
Coverage of church protest and arrest
Protesters entered Cities Church in St. Paul on January 18, 2026 during a worship service. Their target was pastor David Easterwood, who also heads the local ICE field office. Along with Lemon, Fort attended and livestreamed coverage of the protest. Several dozen protesters entered the church and chanted loudly, calling for an end to ICE raids and remembering Renee Good. The church is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. Trump administration Justice Department official Harmeet Dhillon soon announced that she was investigating everyone involved with the protest.A Minnesota grand jury indicted Fort, Lemon and seven protestors on January 29 on charges of conspiracy and interfering with the First Amendment rights of worshippers. The indictment was signed by several political appointees to the U.S. Department of Justice, including Attorney General Pam Bondi and Assistant Attorney General of the Civil Rights Division Harmeet Dhillon.
Fort was arrested at her home in the early morning hours of January 30. She live-streamed her impending arrest until she was taken into custody. After both pleaded not guilty to the charges, Fort was released on personal recognizance bond later on the same day, with Lemon being released without bond hours later.
Fort's attorney is Leita Walker of Ballard Spahr. Walker said "Fort was present at the demonstration solely in a journalistic capacity, documenting an event of significant public interest and concern. The free speech and free press guarantees of the First Amendment fully protect such newsgathering and reporting activities, and Fort’s arrest is a transparent and unconstitutional attempt by our federal government to intimidate journalists and chill their protected speech."
Responses
The National Association of Black Journalists issued a statement saying "The First Amendment is not optional and journalism is NOT a crime. A government that responds to scrutiny by targeting the messenger is not protecting the public, it is attempting to intimidate it, and considering recent incidents regarding federal agents, it is attempting to distract it." Their statement was endorsed by dozens of other civil liberties and journalist organizations.Former Vice President Kamala Harris denounced the arrests of Lemon and Fort, saying "Donald Trump continues to consolidate power and show a flagrant disregard for the rule of law. This arrest is another affront to our rights and freedoms and should alarm and enrage us."
Following Fort and Lemon's arrests, Democratic US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that Pam Bondi should be impeached for the arrest of journalists, as well as her poor handling of the Epstein files and efforts to force Minnesota to give its voter data to the Trump administration.