This isn't the first reporter/photographer arrested over this oil pipe project. Maybe you aren't aware of the thousands of Native Americans objecting to an oil pipe, or do you think the two reporters looked at a crowd of a thousand Indians, bulldozers on their graveyards, and attack dogs all in a row and said, "I don't see much going on here, let's stage something."Not really "for filming". She'll get her day in court. If all she was doing was filming, the case will never even get that far. If she was staging and encouraging the event and also filming it, she'll be in trouble. Putting a camera in your hand does not make you guiltless.
If that's true, this stuff really isn't getting on TV, and arresting all available reporters is working.
(I don't watch TV news, so I don't know if this pipeline protest is on the air.)
But this Thread is about the War on Cops. I would like to direct your attention to the arrest of the person with the camera. I believe you're correct in that, the best reason to arrest the person with the camera is that the activity was staged for the camera. All other scenarios do not provide grounds to arrest the reporter.
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/lakota-sioux-children-pipeline-protest/
