Taking a stand in Baton Rouge

Taking a stand in Baton Rouge

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Photographer Jonathan Bachman was in Baton Rouge on Saturday covering the first protest of his career when he captured what has become for many the defining image of the Black Lives Matter rallies that have swept America this past week.

A woman was standing calmly, her long dress the only thing moving in the breeze, as two police officers in full riot gear confronted her in the middle of a roadway to arrest her.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

"She had no facial expression at all. She just stood there," said Bachman, 31, who was on assignment for Reuters in the Louisiana state capital to cover the protests over last week's fatal police shooting of Alton Sterling, 37, in the city.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

Sterling's death, followed by the fatal shooting of another black man, Philando Castile, 32, near St. Paul, Minnesota, revived a wave of protests over police treatment of minorities that has swirled for two years and given rise to the Black Lives Matter movement.

"I knew it was a good frame and it was something that would tell a story," Bachman said about the moment he captured the image of Ieshia Evans, a nurse from Pennsylvania, before she was arrested. A Sheriff's Office jail log showed a 35-year-old woman with that name was booked on a charge of simple obstruction of a highway and had been released from custody.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

"When I came back to my car and I looked at that picture, I knew it would speak volumes about what was going on in that moment right there and over the past few days in Baton Rouge."

What he could not foresee was the extent to which the photo would go viral and be picked up by newspapers, magazines, websites and television outlets around the world.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

The Atlantic magazine called the image "a single photo from Baton Rouge that's hard to forget," while the BBC hailed it as "legendary." The Washington Post said it "captured a critical moment for the country," while Britain's Daily Mail website called it "an iconic arrest photo."

Moments before taking the photo, Bachman had been photographing protesters who were shouting and throwing their arms in the faces of police officers.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

He said he turned around when he heard someone yell out to the woman: "You're going to get arrested!"

"I got into position and it just unfolded right there in front of me," Bachman said.

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

Bachman, who dropped out of college to become a photographer after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, took more than 1,200 photos of the protest and was up until 4 a.m. transferring files to his laptop.

When he awoke the next day, he had received more than 100 texts and voice mails about the photograph, including one from his girlfriend saying: "I had no idea I was dating a celebrity."

. Baton Rouge, UNITED STATES. Reuters/Jonathan Bachman

But he insisted he was not the story and did not even post the photograph to his own social media pages.

"I was just doing my job," Bachman said. "I felt like this was going to be an important photo, so I just took it."