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Capitol reporter arrested for talking on the phone outside the State Senate

Daily News reporter Ken Lovett was arrested for talking on his phone outside the State Senate Wednesday
Sean S Ewart
Daily News reporter Ken Lovett was arrested for talking on his phone outside the State Senate Wednesday

A long time Capitol reporter was arrested for talking on the phone in the State Senate lobby. New York Daily News reporter Ken Lovett was released without charges after Governor Andrew Cuomo intervened. 

The State Senate has a placard forbidding cell phone use in the Senate lobby, but the rule is universally ignored. The sign does not mention criminal penalties for non compliance. The Senate was not in session Lovett was talking on his phone, and arrested, when a Senate guard called for the assistance of a state trooper. 

The longtime Albany reporter was taken to the State police substation at the Capitol complex, where

Governor Cuomo intervened once he learned of the incident.

Cuomo joked that he was representing the journalist as his official lawyer, pro bono.

“Nothing trumps the freedom of the press,” Cuomo said.

The governor did not comment on the behavior of the state police, which he leads, saying he did not know the exact details of what happened.  A spokesman for the State Senate Majority Leader did offer an apology, though. Spokesman Scott Reif says “ a reporter was asked to comply with a rule prohibiting use of a cell phone in the Senate lobby. He refused”. Reif says the “incident escalated quickly” and that Lovett unfortunately was detained by the State Police. Reif says the Senate requested that the reporter be released immediately and “very much regret the incident”. 

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.