The CEO of the Illinois Press Association, who had joined a lawsuit against the Trump administration for actions toward journalists outside a Chicago-area ICE facility, resigned this week following a dispute with the IPA's board over the litigation.
Don Craven, who had led the IPA since 2021, added the organization to the lawsuit Sunday alongside other Illinois news outlets and advocacy groups. The IPA board disagreed with the decision and told him “to do whatever necessary to dismiss the IPA as a Plaintiff in that litigation,” which Craven did before submitting his resignation, according to an email Craven wrote to an organization of other press associations Wednesday.
Craven wrote that his decision as the IPA’s President, CEO and legal counsel was based on the lawsuit’s aim “to preserve and protect the First Amendment rights of journalists.” Attempts to reach Craven for additional comment were not immediately returned.
The plaintiffs, which include digital news site Block Club Chicago and the Chicago News Guild among others, specifically cite violent actions from ICE agents toward reporters covering protests at a facility in Broadview, Illinois.
“Journalists reported being singled out for detention, being shot by rubber bullets, and being exposed to gas pellets, all because they were doing their jobs,” Craven wrote in his email. “A minister, in clerical garb, was shot at and gassed, while praying in front of the facility.”
The IPA board did not respond to a request for comment. It released a statement to the association’s members Wednesday afternoon, which read that a six-person executive team will oversee operations as the board begins recruiting candidates.
The IPA aims to provide “legislative, business, advertising, educational and legal services” for the 375 daily and weekly newspapers in its membership, according to its website. It is one of the largest newspaper associations in the country.
The IPA is a part of the Newspaper Association Managers, a fraternal organization of press associations across the country which organizes discussions among members on relevant industry issues. Layne Bruce, the executive director of the Mississippi Press Association who serves as the volunteer clerk for NAM, said this news will “without a doubt” be on the agenda for NAM’s next meeting in December.
“As far as I’m aware, this is the most significant development in a press association in the current political climate,” he said.
A mix of news organizations and independent protesters filed the lawsuit Monday, listing ICE officials, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and President Donald Trump among the defendants.
Jonathan Manes, senior counsel for the MacArthur Justice Center and professor at Pritzker School of Law on press freedom and freedom of information, said this is an “incredibly important lawsuit.”
“It’s increasingly clear that if law enforcement wants to ask protesters to disperse, journalists should be permitted to stay and document,” he said. “What we’re seeing is egregious: We’re seeing the press singled out and targeted because they’re press.”