(NEW YORK)– More than 100 leading writers, journalists, and scholars have signed onto a letter, sent Tuesday, urging the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement to immediately release journalist Mario Guevara. Guevara has been held in ICE custody in Georgia for more than 100 days—the only journalist currently detained in the United States for his reporting—and now faces imminent deportation. 

Addressed to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, the letter describes Guevara’s detention as “a direct attack on the First Amendment and freedom of expression.” The letter’s signatories call for his immediate release and warn that holding a journalist in custody for the content of their reporting is “more commonly associated with authoritarianism than with a nation that has historically prided itself on upholding free speech.” 

Organized by PEN America in collaboration with the Committee to Protect Journalists and Free Press, the letter’s signatories include Arundhati Roy, Burhan Sönmez, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, David Remnick, Francisco Goldman, Jim Acosta, Judy Blume, Julianne Moore, Orhan Pamuk, Philip Gourevitch, Sandra Cisneros, Steven Pinker, Valeria Luiselli, and Wajahat Ali.

Guevara, an Emmy-winning reporter, has worked for more than two decades covering immigrant and Latino communities in the United States. He was arrested in June while reporting on a protest, though all criminal charges were dismissed. Despite an immigration judge granting him release on bond and his having had a clear path to obtaining a green card through his U.S. citizen son, federal authorities have kept him in detention and are seeking his deportation, arguing that his reporting of law enforcement activity poses risks to undercover operations and community safety. But the First Amendment protects filming of police in public places and the government’s own legal filings show that Mr. Guevara’s continued detention is predicated on his protected First Amendment reporting activity.

“Mario Guevara was reporting on a protest when he was grabbed off the streets of Atlanta,” said Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf, PEN America’s interim co-CEO and chief program officer, literary programming. “To detain him or any journalist for doing their job chills every independent voice in this country and undermines the First Amendment. His detention is unjust and un-American. Release him now.”

“Mario Guevara’s prolonged detention is a symptom of the continued erosion of press freedom in the United States,” said Jose Zamora, Regional Director, Américas, Committee to Protect Journalists. “Authorities claim his livestreaming endangered law enforcement, but his activity is protected under the First Amendment. Guevara must be released without delay, and the First Amendment must be respected.”

“Thank you to the more than 100 authors, writers, and journalists who are standing in solidarity with Mario Guevara,” said Craig Aaron, co-CEO of Free Press. “Writers inspire us to be better and that is the very thing our government needs now. History will not reflect well on the government’s prolonged and unconstitutional detention of Mario Guevara. The call for his release is spreading. Let’s fight for his freedom with ours.”

The letter comes amid escalating federal pressure on free and independent journalism in the U.S., from costly lawsuits against major news outlets and publishers, to threats of pulling broadcast licenses over the content of programming, to demands that Pentagon reporters sign restrictive pledges that seek to limit what they can publish. Guevara’s threatened deportation also comes at a time when, according to a recent New York Times poll, Americans think the Trump administration has gone too far with these attacks on the free press. 

Signatories of Tuesday’s letter warn that these actions represent a campaign to silence reporting that scrutinizes those in power and threatens to erode the United States’ credibility promoting a free press globally. 

“By escalating from threats and legal harassment to the outright detention of a journalist,” the letter states, “the United States is veering towards autocracy.” 

About PEN America

PEN America stands at the intersection of literature and human rights to protect free expression in the United States and worldwide. We champion the freedom to write, recognizing the power of the word to transform the world. Our mission is to unite writers and their allies to celebrate creative expression and defend the liberties that make it possible. Learn more at pen.org.

About The Committee to Protect Journalists

The Committee to Protect Journalists is an independent, nonprofit organization that promotes press freedom worldwide. It defends the right of journalists to report the news safely and without fear of reprisal.

About Free Press

Free Press believes that positive social change, racial justice and meaningful engagement in public life require equitable access to technology, diverse and independent ownership of media platforms, and journalism that holds leaders accountable and tells people what’s actually happening in their communities.
Contact: Malka Margolies, [email protected], 929-383-1856



The Honorable Kristi Noem
Secretary of Homeland Security
Washington, DC 20528

Todd Lyons
Acting Director, Immigration and Customs Enforcement
500 12th St. SW
Washington, DC 20536

Sept. 30, 2025

Dear Secretary Noem and Acting Director Lyons,

We, the undersigned, write to express our grave concern over the detention of and lack of due process for journalist Mario Guevara, the only journalist currently held in custody in the United States for his work. His continued detention of more than 100 days represents a direct attack on the First Amendment and freedom of expression. Together, we urge you to release Mario Guevara immediately, and ensure that free speech in the United States is protected, respected, and defended.

Guevara is a journalist whose reporting illuminates the experiences of immigrant and Latino communities, bringing coverage to the public that is vital for understanding our society. His detention is not the result of any criminal wrongdoing, but stems directly from his reporting on law enforcement activities that he has live streamed or published. While he was initially arrested for stepping into a street while covering a June protest, all criminal charges against him were dismissed. Despite an immigration judge granting his release on bond and despite his clear path to residency through his U.S. citizen son, federal authorities kept him in detention and moved to deport him. Guevara has been in the United States for more than 20 years, providing urgent news coverage to the Latino community. 

To treat his case as a matter of immigration enforcement is to obscure the essential truth: Mario Guevara is being punished for his reporting. Holding a journalist in custody for the content of their reporting is more commonly associated with authoritarianism than with a nation that has historically prided itself on upholding free speech. 

The implications of Guevara’s detention extend far beyond his personal liberty, as the United States risks eroding its credibility in promoting press freedom globally. For decades, the United States has condemned the detention of journalists in countries that crack down on press freedom, including Turkey, Russia, China, and Iran, and has called on governments to release reporters jailed for exercising their rights. Yet today, by detaining Guevara, the United States mirrors the tactics it has long criticized abroad: suppressing reporting that challenges those in power, intimidating journalists, and chilling public debate. 

Guevara’s detention is part of a broader, coordinated campaign of intimidation against journalists and the press in the United States. In recent weeks, we have seen broadcasters pressured to pull content critical of the administration, publishers threatened or sued with costly lawsuits designed to silence reporting, and the government demanding that journalists sign a “pledge” that attempts to severely restrict their reporting. By escalating from threats and legal harassment to the outright detention of a journalist, the United States is veering toward autocracy.

We urge you to act immediately to release Mario Guevara. His detention is unjust, indefensible, and incompatible with American values. We call on your administration to reaffirm publicly the independence of the press and to guarantee that those who report on government policy can do so without fear of arrest, deportation, or retaliation. The health of American democracy—and the credibility of the United States on the world stage—depends on it. 

Sincerely,

Aatish Taseer

Ahmed Naji

Alan Murray

Amitava Kumar

Amy Tan

Andrew Solomon

Ariel Dorfman

Art Spiegelman

Arundhati Roy

Ashley Hope Pérez

Astra Taylor

Ayelet Waldman

Brandy Zadrozny

Brian Karem

Burhan Sönmez

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC

Charles Whitaker

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Colm Tóibín

Daniel Alarcón

Daniel Handler

Daniel Kraus

Daniel Margolies

Dave Eggers

David Henry Hwang

David Remnick

Dinaw Mengestu

Erwin Chemerinsky

Esmeralda Santiago

Francine Prose

Francisco Goldman

Gary Shteyngart

George Chidi

George M. Johnson

George Packer

George Saunders

Geraldine Fabrikant

Harry Gamboa Jr.

Héctor Tobar

Ibram X. Kendi

Jacob Weisberg

James Hannaham

James Thackara

Jason Stanley

Jay McInerney

Jeff Sharlet

Jelani Cobb

Jennifer Egan

Jennifer Finney Boylan

Jessica Hagedorn

Jim Acosta

Jodi Picoult

Jodie Ginsberg

John Cusack

John Green

John Langan

Jonathan Blitzer

Jonathan Franzen

Jonathan Klein

Jon Williams

Jorie Graham

Judith Butler

Judy Blume

Julianne Moore

Julie Taymor

Junot Díaz

Karla Cornejo Villavicencio

Kate Manning

Kati Marton

Khaled Hosseini

Kim A. Snyder

Krystyna Poray Goddu

Laurie Halse Anderson

Luis Alberto Urrea

Lydia Davis

Margaret Sullivan

Maria Teresa Ronderos

Marie Arana

Marisa Kabas

Mark Whitaker

Mary Morris

Michael Massing

Michael Pietsch

Molly Crabapple

Monika Bauerlein

Nadine Strossen

Naomi Oreskes

Nat Cassidy

Nina Jankowicz

Nora Roberts

Orhan Pamuk

Patricia McCormick

Patrick Radden Keefe

Paul Tremblay

Peter Godwin

Phil Klay

Philip Gourevitch

Raj Haldar

Rebecca Solnit

Reza Aslan

Robert Pinsky

Roger Widmann

Roula Khalaf

Roxanne Donovan

Sandra Cisneros

Sara Gran

Sarah Langan

Scott Frank

Sebastian Junger

Sheila Coronel

Siri Hustvedt

Stacey Abrams

Stacy Schiff

Steven Pinker

Susan Choi

Tobias Wolff

Valeria Luiselli

Wajahat Ali

This letter has been organized by PEN America, in collaboration with the Committee to Protect Journalists and Free Press. Learn more about Mario’s case at www.freedomformario.com.

Logos of three organizations: PEN America in a red speech bubble, CPJ (Committee to Protect Journalists) with a red flame on the ‘J,’ and Free Press with blue “FP” and “Free Press” in purple text.