Lawsuit seeks to block Tennessee abortion reversal law – Minneapolis Star Tribune

NASHVILLE, Tenn. Abortion rights groups on Monday filed a lawsuit challenging a newly enacted Tennessee law that would require women undergoing drug-induced abortions be informed the procedure can be reversed.

The complaint is the second legal battle targeting a sweeping anti-abortion measure Republican Gov. Bill Lee signed off on earlier this year.

The law focuses mainly on banning abortion once a fetal heartbeat is detected about six weeks into pregnancy, before many women know they're pregnant. That portion was challenged just hours after the GOP-dominated Statehouse advanced the bill during the final hours of the annual legislative session.

However, also tucked in the 38-page law is a requirement that doctors must inform women that drug-induced abortions may be halted halfway. Medical groups say the claim isn't backed up by science and there is little information about the reversal procedure's safety

Those who fail to comply with the law which doesn't go into effect until Oct. 1 will face a Class E felony, punishable by up to six years in prison. The lawsuit filed Monday seeks to prevent that requirement from being implemented.

A federal judge in North Dakota blocked a similar law last year.

"This medically unsound and factually inaccurate requirement is part of the coordinated war on truth and has no basis in science," Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.

"Patients shouldn't be subjected to misinformation just to get a medication abortion. Adding insult to injury, threatening doctors with prison time makes this law that much more dangerous," McGill added.

Along with Planned Parenthood, plaintiffs include the Center for Reproductive Rights and the American Civil Liberties Union. These same groups are also involved in the initial lawsuit challenging the fetal heartbeat ban.

A federal judge has since granted a temporary restraining order on the festal heartbeat ban, arguing that he was "bound by the Supreme Court holdings prohibiting undue burdens on the availability of pre-viability abortions."

According to the lawsuit submitted Monday, attorneys argue the law infringes on the First Amendment because it requires doctors to "communicate a content-based, viewpoint-based, and/or controversial government-mandated message that they would not otherwise recite concerning an experimental medical treatment that has not been shown to be safe or effective."

The suit also claims the law violates the Fourteenth Amendment because it illegally singles out abortion patients and physicians who provide the procedure.

Meanwhile, Lee has previously promised to do "whatever it takes in court" to defend the anti-abortion law. The Republican frequently touted that "protecting life" by limiting abortion is a top priority for his administration.

Later, as COVID-19 first began sweeping across Tennessee earlier this year, Lee attempted to block abortions under an executive order banning nonessential medical procedures that was issued to slow the spread of COVID-19.

A federal judge later ruled that Tennessee had to continue allowing abortions, arguing the state did not show any appreciable amount of personal protective equipment would be saved if the ban was applied to abortions.

The plaintiffs in that legal case are now seeking to have the state cover nearly $100,000 in legal fees.

See original here:

Lawsuit seeks to block Tennessee abortion reversal law - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Why Did Gov. Baker Activate the National Guard? – NBC10 Boston

Three days after Gov. Charlie Baker called 1,000 members of the Massachusetts National Guard into active duty, he has ended his activation order and acknowledged the move was made in response to potential protests.

Baker's order, which was announced Friday, did not give a detailed reason for the activation. His administration said at the time the order was given "in the event that municipal leaders require their assistance." But the call-up coincided with a weekend that saw violence crop up at and around demonstrations over policing and racial justice in other parts of the country.

"Following coordination with municipal leaders through the weekend regarding potential large scale demonstrations, Governor Baker today authorized the Adjutant General of the Massachusetts National Guard to end the Governor's Aug. 28 activation order," a spokesperson from the Executive Office of Public Safety & Security said in a statement Monday. "That activation, which made Guard personnel available in the event that municipal leaders required their assistance, will end at midnight tonight."

The governor's order said the Guard was being called upon "to provide necessary assistance to State and local civilian authorities and/or special duty and emergency assistance for the preservation of life and property, preservation of order, and to afford protection to persons."

The administration's announcement of the call-up suggested that the National Guard was being tapped to function in a law enforcement capacity. The administration noted that National Guard military police units go through federally-accredited police training and are trained to Massachusetts standards and that members of the National Guard assisted local law enforcement agencies throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

The project is a private-public partnership involving the state and local governments as well as entities such as MGM, Winn Companies and MassMutual.

It was not immediately clear whether or where the Guard was actually deployed. On Sunday, one Boston-area reporter shared video that appeared to show about two dozen Guard personnel and rows of Guard vehicles in Boston. Another reporter posted a photo from a demonstration in Roxbury where attendees held signs critical of Baker's decision to call upon the National Guard.

Karyn Regal, a reporter for WBZ Newsradio, reported late Monday morning that Massachusetts State Police Col. Christopher Mason said there was no specific threat to Massachusetts but that the National Guard was called up as part of "an abundance of caution" to "staff up and we prepare for all those contingencies."

"I think the call-up of the National Guard was a nod to ensuring that we would have the capacity to continue to be able to facilitate those First Amendment gatherings and make sure people can be heard and make sure people can execute their right, or utilize their right, of public gathering, and they can deliver the message," Mason said at an unrelated press conference, according to Regal. "We certainly have heard the message. And so we want to make sure we continue that people can peacefully gather, that they can voice their concerns, and that they can provide an opportunity for us to hear them."

Baker last held a public event on Thursday, in Springfield.

See the rest here:

Why Did Gov. Baker Activate the National Guard? - NBC10 Boston

Hearing for Kevin Lindke’s appeal of Port Huron election commission decision set for Sept. 14 – The Times Herald

Buy Photo

Mayoral candidate Kevin Lindke delivers remarks during a hearing regarding his qualifications to run for mayor Tuesday, July 28, 2020, in the Municipal Office Center in Port Huron. Port Huron's election commission agreed unanimously to reject his qualifications to run for mayor based on the city's one-year residency requirement.(Photo: Brian Wells/Times Herald)

The Port Huron mayoral hopeful whose qualifications to run for office were rejected by an election commission this summer is seeking to have that decision reversed in court.

Kevin Lindke, whos picked up a local social media following for being critical of officials, filedto run for mayor by the July deadline. Days after a fraud investigation by police, however, the citys election commission ruled he was ineligible to run because he didn't meet thecitys one-year residency requirement.

Now, a hearing is set for Sept. 14 beforeCircuit Judge Michael West.

Lindke is asking the court to reverse the commissions decision.

The issue for me is, the burden is on them, Lindkesaid last week. Like you ask for leases, I gave you leases. You ask for a verified statement, I gave you a verified statement. You don't get to then tell me where I live (and) where I don't live.

The city is asking the courtto dismiss Lindkes request, reiterating concerns from officials over alleged discrepancies among the multiple addresses he provided to the city as his place of residence.

Todd Shoudy, contracted attorney for the city of Port Huron, speaks during a hearing regarding mayoral candidate Kevin Lindke's qualifications to run for mayor Tuesday, July 28, 2020, in the Municipal Office Center in Port Huron.(Photo: Brian Wells/Times Herald)

In the citys reply to Lindkes courtfiling and in a July police report, the cityalleges Lindke provided addresses on 21st, 23rd and Minnie streets on separate occasions while trying to confirm residency in petition forms to file to run for mayor. It also reported he registered to vote using a commercial address on Poplar Street.

According to the city, officials were unable to verify concrete residency at any of them. They pointed to interviews of neighbors and other associates, lack of utility use and real estate changes.

During their July 28 hearing, members of Port Hurons election commission asked if Lindke could provide other evidence he resides in the city. Candidates for mayor and City Council must live in the city for at least a year before the election to be eligible.

But Lindke told officials he didnt believe he had to provide additional proof.

In his circuit court request, Lindke claims the investigation didnt disprove residency and that the commission very suspiciously convened and conspired to deny his candidacy.

The citys reply maintains the city clerk had received information from Lindke that cast serious doubt on whether he met requirements. It also mentions that Lindke did not obtain an order to show cause or set the matter for a timely hearing.

Todd Shoudy, the citys attorney, said they had requested the hearing, expecting to move forward with the Sept. 14 date despite time constraints on when election ballots would be printed.

Lindke, who is litigating the issue without a lawyer, said he thought the citys fraud investigation of his addresses seemed to confirm his fear that officials would use reported residences to put me under surveillance. On Friday, he acknowledged hes always used the address of a relatives house in East China for court documents for the same reason.

Lindke also has two open federal lawsuits one against Port Huron City Manager James Freed and another against Circuit Judge Cynthia Lane. Both involve social media and First Amendment rights.

The latter was first filed in June 2019 after Lane granted a personal protection order against Lindke for an ex-spousal relative.It was over Facebook posts referencingthat relative and the proximity of a sex offender to his young daughter while visiting amid an ongoing custody dispute.

The original complaint called Lanes granting the PPO a social media injunction that constitutes a content-based legal prohibition on constitutionally protected free speech. Philip Ellison, Lindkes attorney in both lawsuits, called it a gag order.

An amended complaint later incorporated St. Clair County Sheriff Tim Donnellon as an additional defendant over enforcement of the PPO.

Circuit Judge Cynthia Lane speaks during a sentencing hearing in February 2017.(Photo: JEFFREY M. SMITH, TIMES HERALD)

St. Clair Countys reply to the complaints rejected the claims, maintaining officials acted on statute and adding that Lindke should be required to complete a pending hearing on his motion to terminate the PPO.

After Lindkes complaint was twice updated, Shoudy, whose firm also represents the county, said another motion to dismiss is still pending.

But he said theres also another underlying question about the case.

When should a federal court get involved in a state circuit court ruling where the allegation is that a PPO violated Mr. Lindkes First Amendment rights? Shoudy said. So, it'd be like the ex parte PPO that was entered. So, the question is, if he wants to challenge that, should he go to the Michigan Court of Appeals? Or can he go to the federal United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan? That's the procedural issue that is currently awaiting a judicial ruling. And I don't expect a ruling any time soon.

The lawsuit against Freed is more recent.

Port Huron City Manager James Freed discusses measurements being taken by the city to prevent the spread of coronavirus during a media briefing Thursday, March 12, 2020, in the Municipal Office Center in Port Huron.(Photo: Brian Wells/Times Herald)

It was filed in April after comments by Lindkeon Freeds Facebook page were deleted and Lindke was blocked. That complaint alleges Lindkes First Amendment rights were once again violated and that Freed only deleted comments about the citys response to COVID-19 to suppress dissent in a public forum.

In its reply to the complaint, the city admits Freed has kept a Facebook page categorized as a public figure but that, despite sharing some local goings-on about the city, he also posts personal items, such as pictures of his family. Shoudy said there remained a question of how personal the page was, entitling Freed to discretion.

Currently, Shoudy said that case is in its discovery phase and that hes awaiting more information after requesting details on Lindkes own social media use.

Lindkes reply asked the federal court to reject that request questioning relevancy and keeping the focus on Freeds Facebook. In response, the citys alleges a long history of Lindke using cyberbullying or cyberstalking tactics in an attempt to harm or destroy the personal life of both private and public individuals on social media.

Ellison said his client is trying to hold people accountable who are generally not, and that in one case, to question those who put a wedge minimally between him and his daughter.

I think what's important behind it is if Kevin was alone in his own thinking, he wouldn't have the following that he has, Ellison said, referring to Lindkes Facebook following. And I think the fact that his following, for the Port Huron area itself, is large and continues to grow is a reflection of (the) disenchantment by citizens of the area who probably have been suffering from the same sort of discontent from their local leaders as Kevin has.

Contact Jackie Smith at (810) 989-6270 or jssmith@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @Jackie20Smith.

Read or Share this story: https://www.thetimesherald.com/story/news/2020/08/31/hearing-set-lindkes-appeal-port-huron-election-commission-decision/5677465002/

Visit link:

Hearing for Kevin Lindke's appeal of Port Huron election commission decision set for Sept. 14 - The Times Herald

Trademark Parody and Freedom of Speech in the U.S. – JD Supra

Food and beverage brands are routinely listed among the most famous and valuable brands in the world.1 With fame, however, comes the increased chance that a brand will be a target for trademark parodists. A March 2020 appellate court decision in a case involving the famous whiskey brand JACK DANIELS illustrates the difficulties brands face when pursuing claims against trademark parodies in the U.S.2

U.S. law does not provide for strict liability preventing the unauthorized use of anothers trademark. Instead, the parodists use must trigger liability under trademark laws prohibiting infringement or dilution or through common law unfair competition claims:

An infringement or unfair competition claim requires proof that the parodists use is likely to cause confusion.

A dilution claim requires proof that the parodists use is likely to blur or tarnish the brand owners famous mark.

There is also no automatic parody defense to an infringement claim. Common sense suggests it may be difficult to prove likelihood of confusion sufficient to meet the test for trademark infringement when faced with a successful parody, i.e., one that immediately communicates that the parodist is making a commentary about a brand through humor or criticism. If the humor or criticism is recognized and obvious making the parody successful why would consumers be confused? On the other hand, if it is difficult to detect the commentary and instead only the brand attributes are readily apparent in the parodists product making the attempt at parody unsuccessful the brand owner is more readily able to prove that confusion is likely.

In contrast to infringement claims, there is a parody defense under the fair use exclusion to federal dilution claims for at least some parodies. The Trademark Dilution Revision Act (TDRA) excludes from its coverage both parodies involving fair use of a famous mark other than as a designation of source for the parodists own goods or services and any noncommercial use of a mark.3 The fair use defense does not apply when the parodist uses the parody as its own trademark. Still, the brand owner must prove that the parody is likely to dilute the distinctiveness of the brand owners mark either by blurring or by tarnishment, with proof that the association of the parody with the brand is likely to impair or harm the brand. Such proof may not be obvious or readily available as to a parody that is perceived as a mere joke in the form of a noncompetitive product like a dog toy using as its brand name a play on words to mimic the brand of a luxury product, together with trade dress copied from the luxury product.4

On the other hand, a competitors advertisement that uses alterations to mock and belittle a brands mascot, even if amusing, crosses the line.5

In addition to the potential difficulties with proving the elements of the underlying claims, free speech considerations may come into play and override the brand owners trademark rights. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech.6 Parody has been recognized as a form of artistic expression, and, where artistic expression is involved, the public interest in avoiding consumer confusion must be balanced against the public interest in free speech.7 Thus, the First Amendment right to freedom of speech can conflict with the consumer and brand owner protection goals of trademark laws. When an expressive work protected by the First Amendment is involved, courts apply the Rogers v. Grimaldi test and the brand owner must show that defendants use of the mark is either (1) not artistically relevant to the underlying work or (2) explicitly misleads consumers as to the source or content of the work.8

Historically, this test comes into play in cases involving works that are clearly artistic and expressive at their very core, such as movies, songs, opinion pieces and articles appearing on websites.9 The recent JACK DANIELS case extended the test to a novelty commercial product, namely dog chew toys, leaving brand owners to wonder just how far Rogers v. Grimaldi will be taken by the courts.10

In response to VIP Products suit for a declaratory judgment, Jack Daniels challenged VIP Products use of JACK DANIELS trade dress in connection with its dog chew toy shown below,11 which features the name BAD SPANIELS and various scatological references:

The district court found in favor of Jack Daniels on both infringement and dilution grounds.12 On the infringement claim, the court found that confusion was likely, with the factors that favored Jack Daniels including actual confusion demonstrated through a survey, VIPs intent to capitalize on the brands goodwill, the strength of the JACK DANIELS marks, the proximity of the goods (due to the Jack Daniels licensing program, which included dog products), the similarity of the marks and the marketing channels, and the low degree of care exercised by the buyer when purchasing the inexpensive dog toy novelty products. The district court also found that Jack Daniels established at the bench trial all the requisite elements for dilution by tarnishment: fame, similarity, and reputational harm.13 The lower court concluded that the claim of parody should be disregarded where the parodist seeks to capitalize on a famous marks popularity for the parodists own commercial use.14

As part of its trial evidence, Jack Daniels submitted testimony from an expert in consumer behavior, who relied on general consumer psychology research to opine that the association of any food or beverage with defecation creates disgust in the mind of the consumer with respect to that food or beverage. The court described this as [w]ell documented empirical research support[ing] that the negative associations of Old No. 2 defecation and poo by weight [on the parody product label] creates disgust in the mind of the consumer when the consumer is evaluating [the brand owners] Jack Daniels whiskey.15 The court accepted this testimony to support a finding of reputational harm to Jack Daniels, because the parodying products references to defecation would creat[e] negative associations, either consciously or unconsciously, and undermin[e] the pre-existing positive associations with its whiskey that would be particularly harmful for a brand selling goods for human consumption: human consumption and canine excrement do not mix.16

The court also found tarnishment based on associating the whiskey brand with toys, particularly the kinds of toys that might appeal to children, because Jack Daniels, as a seller of alcoholic beverages, has a policy that it does not market to children, does not license goods for children, and does not license goods that might appeal to children.17

While the First Amendment was not addressed in the final district court decision, the court had held earlier in the litigation that the First Amendment does not establish protection for the adaptation of the JACK DANIELS trademark and trade dress for the commercial selling of a noncompeting product, distinguishing the dog toy from the expressive works to which the Rogers test had been applied in the Ninth Circuit.18

In a somewhat surprising decision in March 2020, the Ninth Circuit disagreed with the district court regarding whether the dog chew toy is an expressive work. The circuit court held that VIPs Bad Spaniels dog toy is an expressive work entitled to First Amendment protection, reversed the district courts judgment on the dilution claim on the grounds that the noncommercial use defense applied, vacated the judgment on trademark infringement, and remanded back to the lower court for further proceedings on the infringement claim. The appeals court acknowledged that the dog toy was surely not the equivalent of the Mona Lisa but held that the humorous message was sufficient expressive content and that such expressive content is not rendered non-expressive simply because [the product] is sold commercially.19

Jack Daniels sought rehearing en banc by the full appeals court, arguing that the Ninth Circuits designation of a commercial novelty product as an expressive work:

erroneously reaches ordinary commercial products creatively marketed by their manufacturers, thus producing an exception that swallows the traditional rules governing trademark infringement. It also unnecessarily injects constitutional issues into routine cases and threatens the publics ability to avoid confusion, as well as trademark owners ability to protect their marks.20

The Ninth Circuit denied the request for rehearing en banc on June 3, 2020.

Now back at the district court, in order to succeed, Jack Daniels will be required to first satisfy at least one of the two prongs of the Rogers v. Grimaldi test: that the use of the JACK DANIELS marks by VIP was either not artistically relevant or explicitly misleading. Artistic relevance is usually found, giving a parodist broad artistic license, so to speak. Similarly, for a reference to be explicitly misleading, the abuse of the brand owners mark must be particularly compelling. The upshot is that only rarely has a brand owner been able to avoid a swift loss once Rogers is applied, reflecting the difficulty of meeting this test.21

It remains to be seen whether the Ninth Circuits application of the Rogers test to a novelty product will be accepted in other circuits or will be further challenged through a petition for review by the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, brand owners wishing to bring action to stop novelty parody products may wish to avoid the Ninth Circuit.

1 See, e.g., The Worlds Most Valuable Brands 2020, available at https://www.forbes.com/the-worlds-most-valuable-brands/#1c950ba8119c (last accessed Aug. 2, 2020), listing McDonalds, Budweiser, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Nescafe, Starbucks and Frito-Lay among the first 50 such brands.

2 VIP Prods., LLC v. Jack Daniels Props., Inc., 953 F. 3d 1170 (9th Cir. 2020).

3 15 U.S.C. 1125(c)(3).

4 See, e.g., Louis Vuitton Malletier S.A.v. Haute Diggity Dog, LLC, 507 F.3d 252, 252 (4th Cir. 2007). But see Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. VIP Prods., LLC, 666 F. Supp. 2d 974 (E.D. Mo. 2008), where a dog chew toy offered by VIP Products using BUDWEISER trade dress and the BUTTWIPER name was enjoined. For images from these and other parody cases, as well as a check list of pertinent factual considerations, see the authors article, Free Ride or Free Speech? Predicting Results and Providing Advice for Trademark Disputes Involving Parody, 109 The Trademark Reporter 691 (July-Aug. 2019).

5 Deere & Co. v. MTD Prods., Inc., 41 F.3d 39, 46 (2d Cir. 1994).

6 U.S. Const. amend. I.

7 Tommy Hilfiger Licensing, Inc. v. Nature Labs, LLC, 221 F. Supp. 2d 410, 414 (S.D.N.Y. 2002).

8 Rogers v. Grimaldi, 875 F.2d 994 (2d Cir. 1989).

9 Id. at 999 (movie title); Mattel, Inc. v. MCA Records, Inc., 296 F.3d 894 (9th Cir. 2002) (song title); Radiance Found., Inc. v. NAACP, 786 F.3d 316 (4th Cir. 2015) (website and opinion piece).

10 See Amicus Brief of the International Trademark Association submitted in support of Jack Daniels Petition for Rehearing or Rehearing En Banc, arguing that the appellate court holding has the potential to exempt from trademark infringement liability any product that employs a modicum of creative expression on packaging or on the products themselves. Available at https://www.inta.org/wp-content/uploads/public-files/advocacy/amicus-briefs/INTA-Amicus-Brief-VIP-v-JDPI.pdf (last accessed Aug. 2, 2020).

11 Images from VIPs Opening Brief on Appeal, filed Nov. 9, 2018, available at Dkt. No. 16, p. 20-21, in VIP Prods., LLC v. Jack Daniels Props., Inc., Appeal No. 18-16012 (9th Cir.).

12 VIP Prods., LLC v. Jack Daniels Props., Inc., 291 F. Supp. 3d 891 (D. Ariz. 2018).

13 Id. at 905.

14 Id. at 908. To support this proposition, the court cited Grey v. Campbell Soup Co., 650 F. Supp. 1166, 1175 (C.D. Cal. 1986), where DOGIVA dog biscuits were enjoined based on likely confusion and/or dilution with GODIVA chocolates. In the Grey case, the parodists testimony regarding development of the parody products and permission allegedly received from a former GODIVA business person was found to be internally inconsistent and contradicted in significant part by the testimony of others and documentary evidence. In other words, the court found that the parodist was a liar and that finding permeates the opinion and likely influenced the outcome.

15 Id. at 903.

16 Id. at 904.

17 Id.

18 Decision on Summary Judgment, VIP Prods., LLC v. Jack Daniels Props., Inc., No. CV-14-2057-PHX-SMM (D. Ariz. Sept. 27, 2016).

19 953 F. 3d at 1175.

20 Jack Daniels Petition for Rehearing and Petition for Rehearing En Banc, VIP Prods., LLC v. Jack Daniels Props., Inc., No. 18-16012 (9th Cir. Apr. 14, 2020 (Dkt 63-1 at 6)).

21 In Parks v. LaFace Records, for example, plaintiff was able to convince an appeals court that a triable issue of fact was presented as to whether defendants use of Rosa Parks as the title of the song was artistically relevant to the song content, where the song was not about Ms. Parks but did use the refrain Everybody move to the back of the bus. 329 F.3d 437, 451-452 (6th Cir. 2003), rehg and suggestion for rehg en banc denied (July 2, 2003), and cert. denied, 540 U.S. 1074 (2003). In Gordon v. Drape Creative, Inc., 909 F.3d 257, 270271 (9th Cir. 2018), the Ninth Circuit found there was a triable issue of fact as to whether defendants simple use of Gordons mark Honey Badger dont care on greeting cards with minimal artistic expression of their own in the same way that Gordon was using the mark was explicitly misleading.

Read the original here:

Trademark Parody and Freedom of Speech in the U.S. - JD Supra

Scripps launches national fundraising campaign to give books to kids in need – PRNewswire

CINCINNATI, Aug. 31, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --As families across the country enter a back-to-school season unlike any before, employees of The E.W. Scripps Company (NASDAQ: SSP) and communities where it does business in more than 40 markets across the country are raising money to ensure kids in low-income households have access to books.

The "If You Give a Child a Book " childhood literacy campaign is an annual drive led by the Scripps Howard Foundation and supported by Scripps employees and Scripps family members. Over the last four years, the campaign has donated more than352,000 new books to children facing poverty in communities served by Scripps businesses.

This year for the first time, Scripps is inviting its audiences to support the cause. Fundraising campaigns kick off today across Scripps' local and national media platforms:

Each TV station and national brand will select low-income schools and nonprofits in their communities to distribute the books to ensure they go to children who need them most, whether children are learning in a traditional classroom setting, remote learning or a hybrid of the two.

"Research shows the achievement gap that exists between low-income and high-income children can be narrowed or even closed simply bygivingbooks to kids who may not have them in their homes," said Liz Carter, president and CEO of the Scripps Howard Foundation. "When you give a child a book, you give them a chance at success. Kids who learn to read are more likely to graduate, to vote and to be civically involved. Because of this inextricable connection, childhood literacy is a key part of our mission to create a better-informed world and our responsibility to the communities we serve."

Scripps businesses regularly give back to their local communities, including raising more than $2 million for food banks across the country.

The multi-platform "If You Give a Child a Book " fundraising campaigns run through Sept. 11. Learn more and donate at ifyougiveabook.com.

About the Scripps Howard FoundationTheScripps Howard Foundationsupports philanthropic causes important to The E.W. Scripps Company (NASDAQ: SSP) and the communities it serves, with a special emphasis on excellence in journalism. At the crossroads of the classroom and the newsroom, the Foundation is a leader in supporting journalism education, scholarships, internships, minority recruitment and development, literacy and First Amendment causes. The Scripps Howard Awards stand as one of the industry's top honors for outstanding journalism. The Foundation improves lives and helps build thriving communities. It partners with Scripps brands to create awareness of local issues and supports impactful organizations to drive solutions.

SOURCE The E.W. Scripps Company

http://www.scripps.com

View post:

Scripps launches national fundraising campaign to give books to kids in need - PRNewswire

Gas Lighting the First Amendment – Eugene Weekly

He wasnt with the crowd. He was holding up a press pass.

On May 31, Eugene Weekly staff writer Henry Houston says his constitutional rights were violated when the Eugene Police Department shot pepper balls and threw a tear gas canister at him from 30 feet away, hitting him in the chest with the canister as he held up that press pass yelling that he was a journalist.

Outraged by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, protesters in Eugene marched through the streets during the last weekend of May, the events leading to a riot and then curfews the following nights. In reporting on the events, journalists followed along.

After the incident, EPD refused to release records on the correct use of tear gas and other riot control weapons, instead sending a heavily redacted PDF and referencing general policies found on the citys website.

Houston and the Civil Liberties Defense Center have filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Federal District Court against EPD, claiming a violation of constitutional rights.

Despite the lack of transparency, EWs investigation found that the officers may have violated policies on correct uses of gas munitions, which could have caused extensive injury, and directly violated Houstons First Amendment rights of the freedom of the press.

Credentialed Media

After the chaotic first nights of protests, City Manager Sarah Medary enacted a curfew of midnight for downtown Eugene on May 31, which was suddenly changed to 11 pm only minutes before it went into effect. It encompassed the entire city. The curfew specifically exempted credentialed media.

People continued to protest after curfew, and that night, journalists followed EPDs armored BearCat while officers told protesters to disperse over a loudspeaker and shot them with rubber bullets and pepperballs.

But even then it was clear EPD would not distinguish between reporters and others. In a video recorded by The Register-Guard, an EPD officer tells a group of journalists to roll out.

An RG reporter can be heard saying that they are journalists.

Doesnt matter, the police responded.

Later that night, Houston began following the BearCat in a parking lot near the University of Oregon campus on Alder Street, holding up his press pass as a group of about 20 protesters ran away. The loudspeaker told him to disperse and he yelled back that he was a journalist, filming and continuing to show his press pass seen in the distance on the RG video.

The BearCat drove near Houston, and was less than 30 feet away as measured by the width and number of parking spots, visible in the video. He was hit in the chest with a tear gas canister as it spewed gas, and shot at with pepper balls weapons that are similar to paintballs, but release pepper spray. When the canister hit the ground, sparks flew around and Houston jumped back. In the video taken on his phone, he shouted again that he was a journalist. The lights were on inside the vehicle.

I can see you smiling at me, he said in horror as he ran back towards the other journalists. Houston says EPD threw more tear gas canisters at the group of reporters as the BearCat drove away.

Reporters, were reporters, they yell in the video.

No Accountability

After Houston was tear gassed, he reached out to EPD, asking why police were ignoring the media exception for the curfew. In response, EPD spokesperson Melinda McLaughlin wrote in an email to EW that he was subject to risk by being out with protesters.

While I feel it unfortunate you have experienced this, there is no way to discern whether or not someone is credentialed media if they are embedded or mixed in with a large group violating curfew, she wrote.

Police Commissioner Sean Shivers says that allegations against officer behavior must be reviewed every 60 days. Back in June, he told EW that the commissioners and Civilian Review Board have requested an expedited process. But its been more than two months, and no information has been released.

The day after he was gassed, Houston called and spoke with Chief Chris Skinner, who apologized for the incident. Medary reached out to EW and also apologized. Seeking accountability for police actions and use of tear gas on May 31, EW filed a public records request with EPD, asking for their training and guidance for the correct usage of such weapons.

The record received was a PowerPoint PDF, with most of the bullet points redacted. EPD cited ORS 192.345 which exempts the release of records or information that would reveal or otherwise identify security measures, or weaknesses or potential weaknesses in security measures, taken or recommended to be taken to protect an individual, buildings or other property.

That public records exemption was changed in 2003 from public buildings to all buildings and individuals. The reasoning for expanding this was explained in a Oregon House Judiciary Committee meeting.The bill was meant to protect buildings after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, specifically infrastructure and utilities. The committee said it did not want to go too far with the exemption, because people need these records.

Police policies are not mentioned in the context of the records exemption, and the records request was not geared towards individuals or buildings. The public would be served by having the information on EPDs training and guidelines for the use of tear gas. If the public knew the information, such as the de-escalation processes and when an officer would be required to use tear gas, it could potentially help deter a riot or similar instance.

By not releasing the information to be disseminated to the public, EPD shows a lack of transparency. To redact the document without considering the public interest or citing the security reasons for doing so is to hide key information that can hold authorities accountable.

Incorrect Usage

Without records from EPD explaining the correct usage of those weapons, EW set out to find its own information about what happened.

Commissioner Shivers says that he wouldnt be surprised if policies werent followed that night:

It wouldnt be surprising if officers arent following policies. Forty percent of our officers are under five years of experience.

During a June 5 EPD press conference, officers explained some of the weapons they use in crowd control. EPD buys its weapons from Combined Systems, a weapons company based in Pennsylvania. One of the main munitions they use is a CS canister grenade, which after the pin is pulled, breaks into three separate sections, releasing gas from all three.

Michelle Heiser is the medical director of Physicians for Human Rights, a global non-governmental organization that uses medicine to promote human rights. She says that because of the chemicals in tear gas, it should always be used as a last resort. She adds that canisters themselves can be used as a weapon.

That is absolutely against international and national guidelines. Tear gas canisters are never supposed to hit human beings, Heisler says. Whatever officer did that should be held accountable. There should be criminal penalties. She adds that she recently traveled to Portland to conduct research on the Portland Police Bureaus use of gas.

Houston says that he experienced chest bruising from the canister and the after effects of inhaling the tear gas and fumes from the pepper balls. Several days after the incident, he went to the hospital to get his injuries checked out.

The canister can cause organ damage or arrhythmias if it hits someone in the chest, Heisler says. In addition, people inhale the smoke in front of their faces, which causes irritation to the skin, eyes and lungs.

This is also dangerous because, Heisler says, companies that produce weapons often lack transparency when it comes to what chemicals are actually used.

We are not getting information so it is hard to know how to treat it, she says.

There have also been reports of EPD using expired tear gas on protesters. Captain Eric Klinko addressed this at the press conference by explaining that the expired gas is just less potent, comparing it to old medicine. On the label of the canister it clearly says, Do not use after expiration date.

I dont think that is good research, Heiser says. If the chemical makeup of these weapons are unknown, the effects of the expired chemicals are also not understood.

In response to EWs record request, EPD also referenced its policy on tear gas use, which does not explain how it is used, and mostly focuses on who has the authority to use it.

The city of Sacramento has a long list of instructions on when and how to use chemical munitions for controlling crowds. In its instructions for arming a smoke grenade and throwing a riot smoke grenade, it advises never to throw it overhead.

Do not throw the grenade using the overhand lob or overhand baseball throw. This could result in an air-burst, causing unnecessary, accidental injury to individuals in the vicinity of the air-burst, the manual says.

But in the RG video footage, the arc of the canister appears to be thrown overhead from the turret at the top of the BearCat. At the June EPD press conference, Klinko said that it is supposed to be tossed underhand, but someone from the BearCat could potentially need to throw it overhand.

In a turret, for instance, if only this much of your body is out, you might need to overhand toss it, Klinko said. Someone getting hit is not the objective. Its absolutely not.

Read more:

Gas Lighting the First Amendment - Eugene Weekly

Gov. DeWine doesnt support Trump’s Goodyear boycott, but is believer in the First Amendment – News 5 Cleveland

COLUMBUS, Ohio Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said Thursday that he does not support President Trumps call to boycott top Akron employer Goodyear over an image suggesting employees are not allowed to wear MAGA hats, but says he is a believer in the First Amendment and peoples ability to express themselves.

We should not boycott this good Ohio company, DeWine said, responding to a reporters question about the Goodyear boycott during his regular COVID-19 briefing at the Statehouse. They have good Ohio workers and they produce a very good product.

The governor said that he doesnt think that we know all the facts about an image of a presentation slide shown at one of the companys factories in Topeka, Kansas that surfaced earlier this week, prompting the president to tweet a call for a boycott of the tire company.

Although the governor said he did not support the boycott, he said he is a believer in the First Amendment.

And I think as much while any company has a right to run its business the way it wants to run it, I think it's always better if people have the ability to express themselves, he said.There are limits, and I know legally that a company can, you know, can control what goes on in their workplace. But I would just think companies should be as open to First Amendment things as they canthats what kind of country this is.

When asked by another reporter if he would support government employees wearing political attire, Gov. DeWine said there is a difference between state employees and those working in the private sector.

I don't think that we would want, let's say, a state inspector who is out, who might have a political button on on state time and taxpayers paying for that person, DeWine said. So that's not allowed.

The slide, which the company has since said was not part of an official training program and was created by an employee at the Topeka facility, showed a list of acceptable and unacceptable attire in the workplace. The acceptable list included clothing with Black Lives Matter and LGBT on it, while the unacceptable list included Blue Lives Matter, All Lives Matter, MAGA attire and political affiliated slogans or material.

RELATED: Goodyear responds after president calls for boycott of Akron's 4th-largest employer

After the slide was reported on by a Kansas news station, the president tweeted: Dont buy GOODYEAR TIRES - They announced a BAN ON MAGA HATS. Get better tires for far less! (This is what the Radical Left Democrats do. Two can play the same game, and we have to start playing it now!).

On Thursday, Goodyear tweeted a statement from Chairman, CEO and President Rich Kramer, which read, in part: I deeply regret the impression it has created and want to clarify Goodyears position.

Goodyear does not endorse any political organization and has a policy that asks associates to refrain from expressions of support of any candidate or party in the workplace, Kramer stated.

Goodyear supports law enforcement and has supplied tires to police and fire personnel for over 100 years, the statement continues.

We have clarified our policy to make it clear associates can express support for law enforcement through apparel at Goodyear facilities, Kramer said.

Earlier Thursday, dozens of employees and city leaders rallied outside the Akron factory in support of the company.

RELATED: Watch Goodyear tire workers rally after Trump's call for boycott of Akron company

Read the original:

Gov. DeWine doesnt support Trump's Goodyear boycott, but is believer in the First Amendment - News 5 Cleveland

Did Georgia school officials forget that the First Amendment protects students too? – Hopkinsville Kentucky New Era

F ifty-one years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unequivocally that public school students are protected by the First Amendment.

It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate, the court stated in the landmark decision Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District. In our system, state-operated schools may not be enclaves of totalitarianism. School officials do not possess absolute authority over their students.

As indelible and clear as the Tinker decision is in the pantheon of individual rights, school officials still seem to ignore or circumvent it especially, it seems, during the current global pandemic.

The latest example made headlines when two students at North Paulding High School in Dallas, Ga., took cellphone photos of crowded school hallways and posted them online, showing that few students were wearing masks. One of the students who posted the photos, Hannah Watters, reported in her tweet on Aug 4, We were stopped because it was jammed. This is not OK.

That tweet alone has all the elements of free speech it informs the public about what is happening at school. It also heeds the Tinker caveat that students are protected by the First Amendment, but conduct that materially disrupts a school is not. The photos went viral, a sign of the chaotic opening of schools for the new term.

But the tweeting students were swiftly suspended from school for five days for what they did. A school official wrote to parents that the photos did not look good and the students told they violated rules about using cellphones in school without permission. The schools principal announced to students that Anything thats going on social media that is negative or [the like] without permission photography video anything there will be consequences.

After nationwide backlash, the suspensions were both canceled. Watters tweeted, This morning my school called and they have deleted my suspension. To everyone supporting me, I cant thank you enough. In an interview, she said, This was some good and necessary trouble, echoing the words of the late Congressman John Lewis. After the uproar, the high school closed for a period to allow cleaning after at least 35 students and school staffers tested positive for COVID-19.

The Georgia episode points up the persistent avoidance of the Tinker ruling in many public schools.

It truly is mindboggling that more than 50 years after Tinker we are still having to remind principals that students have the right to speak peacefully and lawfully on campus, said Mike Hiestand, senior legal counsel for the Student Press Law Center, which advocates for student speech rights. Its truly not rocket science. But sadly, I think its not so much they dont know about the law as they dont care. The idea that students dare criticize them is just not something many school officials seem able to tolerate.

Hiestand said this persistent avoidance of Tinker has been exacerbated by the pandemic. Schools have clamped down, for example on providing accurate, timely information in response to Freedom of Information (FOI) requests and interviews with school officials, he said. Schools are creating barriers to reporters trying to show what Back to School 2020 actually looks like. The other thing were starting to see are cutbacks in school budgets or other COVID-related changes that eliminate or cut back on student journalism programs.

More broadly, school officials seem to be especially antagonistic toward social media, cellphones and other devices that students carry with them every day, says Frank LoMonte, director of The Brechner Center for Freedom of Information at the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications.

There is a pervasive and growing sense among authority figures that social media is somehow so uniquely dangerous that normal First Amendment principles go out the window, LoMonte said. Everyone readily recognizes that complaining about school safety conditions is protected speech. But somehow, the introduction of social media causes an existential panic.

Hadar Harris, executive director of the Student Press Law Center, also said, Students must not be disciplined for exposing health and safety issues at their school, particularly in the midst of a pandemic. The school districts policy related to cellphone and social media use on campus raises serious First Amendment concerns in and of itself. Schools should be on notice that students have the right to report responsibly and lawfully on the situation in their schools, even if it is not the most flattering view of the school.

John Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute, said, Hannah and her schoolmate acted in the best tradition of whistleblowers by bringing to light information that must be considered in making difficult choices.

Mickey Osterreicher, general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, was especially perturbed by the school officials hostility toward photography. In this case, not only was the taking and posting of photos not seriously disruptive of normal school activities, it served a cardinal purpose enshrined in constitutional protections, namely the free exchange of ideas especially on matters of public concern.

Looking into the future, Osterreicher added, Students must be allowed to continue to photograph and report on conditions in their schools as well as their communities. Anything less creates a chilling effect on the constitutional rights of the next generation of newsgatherers.

Tony Mauro is contributing U.S. Supreme Court correspondent for the National Law Journal and ALM Media, and a special correspondent for the Freedom Forum.

Read more from the original source:

Did Georgia school officials forget that the First Amendment protects students too? - Hopkinsville Kentucky New Era

Lata Nott: Standing up for the First Amendment and Austin Tice – The Mercury

Earlier this month, I spoke (virtually, of course) with a group of journalism students about how the First Amendment relates to, and protects, the work theyll soon be doing. I walked them through the major legal doctrines that protect freedom of expression in this country:

The government cant create laws that censor or punish people for their speech, unless theres a compelling purpose behind them and those laws are the least restrictive way to achieve them;

It cant apply laws or take actions in a manner that discriminates against people based on the point of view theyre expressing;

It cant engage in prior restraint prevent something from being published unless it can prove that that publication would cause immediate and irreparable harm to the United States.

Its a lecture Ive given many times over the past few years, but afterwards, one of the students asked me a question Id never been asked before. Who makes sure the government isnt doing any of the things it cant be doing? Is there an agency that ensures compliance with the First Amendment?

For the most part, its just us, I replied and made some sort of expansive hand gesture in an effort to let the student know that us encompassed her, me, the other 20 people on the Zoom call and the American people as a whole.

It was an off-the-cuff answer, and if Id had more time and my Wi-Fi connection had been less laggy, I might have said that its the courts that strike down unconstitutional laws and government actions, although executive agencies like the Department of Justice and legislative bodies like Congress can certainly play a role by pushing for and implementing further safeguards for free expression. But my original answer still stands. Courts hear cases when lawsuits are brought by people whose rights have been violated. The executive and legislative branches respond to demands from their constituents. And the public learns about the governments transgressions through the press.

One of the most interesting things about the press is that despite being the only profession actually named in the Constitution, journalists themselves are not defined by any legal document or ordained by any government body. As my colleague Gene Policinski wrote on World Press Freedom Day a few years back, In the larger sense, were all press every time we post, tweet or blog whether we want that title or not. Media critics and advocates alike are fond of noting the press has no more and no less privilege under the First Amendment than any other U.S. citizen.

This is as true for the professional journalists who covered the recent Black Lives Matter protests as it is for the Minneapolis teenager who recorded the killing of George Floyd, which sparked those protests in the first place. Anyone who cares enough to expose wrongdoing people in power is serving as a watchdog. Anyone who wants to make truth known to the public at large wields the power of the press.

But the fact that anyone can do this doesnt detract from its significance, or the risks that it might entail.

On Aug. 14, it has been eight years since Austin Tice went missing. Austin was a Georgetown law student and former U.S. Marine Corps officer who went to Syria as a freelance journalist in 2012. He was also one of the only Western journalists on the ground while the Syrian conflict was unfolding and he made it his mission to report on the impact the conflict was having on civilians. On July 25, 2012, he posted this on his Facebook page, responding to those who told him he was crazy to try to report what was happening in Syria: We kill ourselves every day with McDonalds and alcohol and a thousand other drugs, but weve lost the sense that there actually are things out there worth dying for. Weve given away our freedoms piecemeal to robber barons, but were too complacent to do much but criticize those few who try to point out the obvious.

On Aug. 14, 2012, three days after his 31st birthday, Austin Tice was taken captive as he was preparing to travel from Daraya, near Damascus, Syria, to Beirut, Lebanon. Diverse credible sources report that he is still alive. Austins parents, who have unrelentingly advocated for his return, recently published an open letter in The Washington Posts Press Freedom Partnership newsletter that included this heartbreaking message:

Each year around Austins birthday and the date of his capture, theres a brief moment of renewed attention and media coverage. Our son is imprisoned every single day. Every single day Austin needs his colleagues in journalism to ask questions about what is being done to bring him home, to dig for answers when they meet with obfuscation and to hold U.S. government officials accountable for their actions or lack thereof.

Advocating for Austin and other journalists who have been unjustly targeted or detained is in our hands. So is safeguarding our First Amendment freedoms. As Austin pointed out, we cant afford to be complacent.

Lata Nott is a Freedom Forum Fellow. Contact her via email at lnott@freedomforum.org, or follow her on Twitter at @LataNott.

Read the original here:

Lata Nott: Standing up for the First Amendment and Austin Tice - The Mercury

Trump Takes Fight Over Blocking Twitter Users to Supreme Court – Hollywood Reporter

[T]he President uses his account to speak to the public, not to give members of the public a forum to speak to him and among themselves, the Department of Justice argues.

Donald Trump is a prolific tweeter; so, its not entirely surprising that hes decided to take a dispute about whether or not hes free to block whomever he wants on Twitter to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Trump was sued in 2017 by the Knight First Amendment Institute and several users who had been blocked from viewing his tweets. They claimed because the president uses the social media site as a public forum to share official information their constitutional right to petition the government was being violated.

A New York federal judge in May 2018 sided with the plaintiffs and found that Trump can't block Twitter users because of their political opinions without violating the First Amendment. U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald held that the @realDonaldTrump account meets the Supreme Court's standards for a designated public forum; barring participation based on political speech constitutes viewpoint discrimination; and "no government official including the President is above the law."

Trump appealed the decision, but lost again in the 2nd Circuit. In July 2019, a federal appellate panel affirmed the finding that blocking critics from seeing his tweets amounts to a constitutional violation: The First Amendment does not permit a public official who utilizes a social media account for all manner of official purposes to exclude persons from an otherwise open online dialogue because they expressed views with which the official disagrees."

On Thursday, Trump submitted a petition to the Supreme Court asking it to examine whether the First Amendment deprives a government official of his right to control his personal Twitter account by blocking third-party accounts if he uses that personal account in part to announce official actions and policies.

The presidents petition argues that he created a personal Twitter account in March 2009 and prior to his election he used it to tweet about a variety of topics, including popular culture and politics. Now, he still uses it for those reasons but also admits he has used the account to communicate with the public about official actions and policies of his administration.

He argues that his right to block people stems from his use of the site, not his elected office. The blocking capability was available to President Trump because he is a registered Twitter user, not by virtue of his public office, and is available to him on the same terms that Twitter makes that capability available to all account holders, Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey B. Wall in the complaint. He argues that anyone with internet access can view Trumps tweets, that if someones been blocked all they have to do is log out of Twitter, and that blocking users doesnt prevent them from criticizing him on the platform.

Even while logged into their blocked accounts, respondents may mention @realDonaldTrump in their own tweets, and may post screen-shots of @realDonaldTrump tweets with their own responses to those tweets, argues Wall. They may also view replies that others have posted in response to @realDonaldTrump tweets, and may reply to those replies. Those replies-to-replies appear in the collection of replies beneath @realDonaldTrump tweets for all to see, other than President Trump himself.

Trump disputes that his personal account has become an official government account just because he sometimes uses it to make official statements. He warns that if the ruling stands public officials wont be able to insulate their social media accounts from harassment, trolling, or hate speech with-out invasive judicial oversight like any other user could.

[T]he President uses his account to speak to the public, not to give members of the public a forum to speak to him and among themselves, Wall argues, again emphasizing that Trump intends this to be a personal, not work, account. Although President Trump is currently a public official, the @realDonaldTrump account belongs to him in his personal capacity, not his official one. He created and began frequent use of that account in 2009, well before taking public office. In contrast to the @WhiteHouse and @POTUS accounts, over which he may exercise control only by virtue of his office, he will continue to have control over the @realDonaldTrump account after his term of office has completed.

Wall argues that Trump blocking people who criticize him on Twitter is akin to an off-duty police officer asking uninvited guests wearing anti-police paraphernalia to leave a pavilion hes reserved in a public park to host a family picnic.

Like police forces, the rest of the governmentincluding the Office of the Presidentis staffed by people who retain private lives, argues Wall. To avoid expanding constitutional restrictions in a way that trammels their own constitutional freedoms, courts must distinguish between their private actions and state action.

Further, Wall argues people can no more insist on being given access to the Presidents tweets on @realDonaldTrump than they could insist on being given entry to Trump Tower if the President chose that as the venue where he made important official announcements to preferred members of the public and press.

By blocking people, Trump is just exercising his prerogative not to listen and he argues denying people in office the ability to do that may deter them from using social media. (Read the full filing below.)

Ironically, therefore, by curtailing the ability of public officials to choose whom they wish to interact with on their own social media accounts, the decision below has the potential to undermine speech rather than further it, argues Wall. Those concerns take on heightened significance when the public official in question is the President of the United States. Denying him the power to exclude third parties accounts from his personal accounta power that every other owner of a Twitter account possesseswould deter holders of his Office from using new technology to efficiently communicate to a broad public audience.

The Knight Instituted on Thursday issued a lengthy press release in response to the filing, including this statement from Executive Director Jameel Jaffer. This case stands for a principle that is fundamental to our democracy and basically synonymous with the First Amendment: government officials cant exclude people from public forums simply because they disagree with their political views, said Jaffer, who argued the case before the Second Circuit. The Supreme Court should reject the White Houses petition and leave the appeals courts careful and well-reasoned decision in place.

Link:

Trump Takes Fight Over Blocking Twitter Users to Supreme Court - Hollywood Reporter