York County agrees to improve public access to criminal court records in response to suit by Spotlight PA, others Spotlight PA – Spotlight PA

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YORK Information on criminal cases will be available faster and with fewer redactions under a settlement agreement between the York County Clerk of Courts and five newsrooms including Spotlight PA that had sued alleging First Amendment violations.

The settlement will bring York County in line with First Amendment and Pennsylvania Constitution requirements when granting access to criminal court records, said Sasha Dudding, a legal fellow for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Thats important for both members of the media who are reporting on criminal cases in York County and also members of the public who are entitled to know whats happening in their community, said Dudding, whose organization provides free legal resources to journalists.

Earlier this year, Spotlight PA joined four other state newsrooms to sue York County Clerk of Courts Daniel J. Byrnes after he shut down free, easy access to criminal court records and instituted practices and policies that slowed the release of documents, according to the federal lawsuit filed in March.

Byrnes office also improperly withheld documents and redacted nonconfidential information, obscuring public access that is critical to reporting on the details of a case, the lawsuit alleged.

Dudding and attorney Paula Knudsen Burke both represented Spotlight PA, the York Daily Record, The York Dispatch, LNP Media Group, and public media organization WITF in the lawsuit. Byrnes, an elected Republican who took office in 2020, was the sole defendant.

Byrnes initially called the lawsuit frivolous and said his office has actually expanded free public access to the public, especially to those facing a financial barrier to information.

The Plaintiffs are essentially disgruntled by not having unfettered and immediate access to all records within the Clerk of Courts Office, an attorney for Byrnes wrote in a March 2022 court filing.

In an email Tuesday, Byrnes said his office will continue to reflect our adherence to professional practices that serve the media and general public as accorded by law.

Attorneys for the news organizations pointed to numerous instances where they say the office delayed access to, improperly restricted, and overcharged for judicial records.

During a three-week period in September 2021, journalists from the five news organizations requested access to 42 judicial records. The office provided six the same day, denied access to another six, and redacted information in 32, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit said the office improperly redacted details in several cases, including the name of an adult victim of an alleged property crime and the address of a shooting.

In court filings, attorneys for Byrnes wrote that the office complied with the requirements of the statewide court system and Pennsylvania law, but acknowledged a few isolated errors.

As part of the settlement, Byrnes agreed to provide the news organizations with a copy of a policy notifying the public how to access judicial records, and a fee schedule that aligns with statewide court policies.

The agreement also addresses the timeline for obtaining records. Byrnes office will make all reasonable attempts to respond to requests on the same business day on which the request is made, and when not practicable, on the next business day, excepting inconsequential deviations and extraordinary circumstances which may delay access.

The office must also adopt a written policy outlining how it will respond to requests for judicial records made in person and by email.

Byrnes also agreed to pay $6,796.52 for costs and expenses incurred by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Both sides agreed that the clerks office will provide redacted versions of documents in order to protect the identities of victims of human trafficking and minor victims of physical or sexual abuse. But the office agreed to not withhold those documents entirely.

Byrnes on Tuesday said his office is pleased that the lawsuit has been resolved with all parties supporting and acknowledging that the Clerk of Courts has a legal and ethical duty to protect the identity of crime victims, particularly minors as specified in the laws of the Commonwealth of PA.

Byrnes office and the newsrooms agreed to have employees who make or fulfill requests for court records participate in training within 30 days.

Hopefully that will sort of bring everybody to the same understanding, Dudding said.

WHILE YOURE HERE… If you learned something from this story, pay it forward and become a member of Spotlight PA so someone else can in the future at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.

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York County agrees to improve public access to criminal court records in response to suit by Spotlight PA, others Spotlight PA - Spotlight PA

‘He’s Developing Blinkers’: Has Ron DeSantis Let All the Winning Go to His Head? – POLITICO

Its hardly just Republicans who think so. Ione Townsend, the chair of the Hillsborough County Democratic Party, told me she knows three or four people who she said voted for DeSantis in 2018 but wont this year because of this because of the action he took against Warren. She also said they didnt want to talk about it publicly. I heard a lot of this from a lot of people.

They absolutely exist, she said, as if she were speaking about some scarce species.

But enough of them? To make a difference come November? Townsend doubted it.

Were too polarized. There are people who come hell or high water theyre going to vote Republican or theyre going to vote Democrat. No matter what. Because were in our silos. There are too many Fox News watchers who believe Democrats are pedophiles and eat babies, she said. Its really discouraging.

When something like this happens, you can for a moment lose your faith in politics, Warren told me. But Ive been encouraged and had my faith restored by not just all the people whove rushed to my defense but people who have told me, I didnt vote for you, but I know this is wrong. Ive had people tell me, I wont vote for the governor again because of this.

Supporters, former voters, for DeSantis? Who are not anymore? Because of this? I said.

Correct.

But again how many?

I dont know, he said.

It sounded at least to me like a tacit recognition that for every Republican or independent who is outraged by these power plays by DeSantis there probably are at least as many voters who are cheering him on or just dont know or care. If there is, then, true political peril, it more realistically plays out over a longer arc of time.

If Warren comes back as state attorney in any way, shape or form, I think thats a loss, a former DeSantis aide told me. Like, Charlie Crist couldnt take him down Covid couldnt take him down but Andrew Warren took him down? the aide said. Andrew Warren cant be his first loss.

Hes developing blinkers where hes not seeing the board, in my judgment.

Mac Stipanovich

I dont know that well find out this year, or when well find out, but has he gone, or will he go, too far? Mac Stipanovich said. Hes developing blinkers where hes not seeing the board, in my judgment. Now, it hasnt cost him anything so far, he keeps being rewarded, and so he keeps up the behavior that produces those rewards. But I think hes missing things that could come back to bite him.

It is in the end, of course, not about the Warren case as such, or even its eventual upshot. Its about the precedent.

If Andrew Warren could be suspended for what he did, Stipanovich said, then any public official could be suspended for almost anything that they said.

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'He's Developing Blinkers': Has Ron DeSantis Let All the Winning Go to His Head? - POLITICO

‘So to Speak’ podcast: What does the First Amendment protect on social media? – Foundation for Individual Rights in Education

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'So to Speak' podcast: What does the First Amendment protect on social media? - Foundation for Individual Rights in Education

Author of The Onion Supreme Court brief explains why parody is worth defending – NPR

The Onion head writer Mike Gillis submitted an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court this week. He says he hopes it will convince the court to take up an Ohio man's First Amendment case while educating the broader public. Mike Gillis hide caption

The Onion head writer Mike Gillis submitted an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court this week. He says he hopes it will convince the court to take up an Ohio man's First Amendment case while educating the broader public.

The long-running First Amendment case of an Ohio man is suddenly getting a lot of attention, thanks to the satirical news site The Onion.

And that's not because it's been spoofed. It's because the publication has gotten involved directly, submitting a brief to the Supreme Court in defense of parody itself.

The 23-page amicus brief was filed on Monday in support of Anthony Novak, who is asking the Supreme Court to take up his civil rights lawsuit against the police officers who arrested and prosecuted him for creating a parody Facebook page of their department (more on that here).

"Americans can be put in jail for poking fun at the government? This was a surprise to America's Finest News Source and an uncomfortable learning experience for its editorial team," the brief opens.

It goes on to defend the purpose and power of parody in society before explaining that successful satire comes from being realistic enough that it initially tricks readers into believing one thing, only to make them "laugh at their own gullibility when they realize that they've fallen victim to one of the oldest tricks in the history of rhetoric."

None of this would work if it were preceded by a disclaimer, the brief argues, noting that most courts have historically shared this view except for the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which, in this instance, sided with the police officers. The Onion's brief urges the Supreme Court to take up the case and rule in Novak's favor. It also wants "the rights of the people vindicated, and various historical wrongs remedied," by the way.

"The Onion cannot stand idly by in the face of a ruling that threatens to disembowel a form of rhetoric that has existed for millennia, that is particularly potent in the realm of political debate, and that, purely incidentally, forms the basis of The Onion's writers' paychecks," it reads.

The document quickly started making the rounds on social media and in straight news headlines, both for its unusual form of intervention this is its first such legal filing and trademark humorous approach to a serious topic.

In classic The Onion fashion, it is snarky one subheading reads "It Should Be Obvious That Parodists Cannot Be Prosecuted For Telling A Joke With A Straight Face" and self-referential it says the story sounds like a headline right out of The Onion, "albeit one that's considerably less amusing because its subjects are real."

It also appeals directly to its audience, sprinkling in numerous Latin phrases (at one point, a whole paragraph full see page 15) because it "knows that the federal judiciary is staffed entirely by total Latin dorks."

Some of the brief's more academically minded fans have said it should be taught in law schools, according to its author (who jokes this might be the first time his own father, a workers' compensation attorney, has used an exclamation mark to praise any of his writing). But it also seems to have struck a chord beyond the legal world.

Mike Gillis, head writer for The Onion and author of the brief, told NPR in a phone interview that he hopes the filing won't just help convince the Supreme Court to take on the case, but also show the public why parody matters so much.

"To just get this many people thinking about parody, and the fact that it adds a lot to their lives and that it's something worth defending, was very, very satisfying for me," he says.

Gillis, who has been at The Onion for about a decade, says the opportunity to get involved in this case arose over the summer when a mutual friend put Novak's legal team in touch with the publication.

He hadn't personally been closely following the case, but once The Onion's lawyers started looking into it and the editorial staff started discussing it they realized it was right up their alley.

As Gillis explains, amicus briefs are often drafted by the lawyers involved in the case, then given to the interested parties for additional details. In this case, it was the reverse: He wrote most of the arguments and jokes, then The Onion's lawyers bulked it up with legal precedent and historical context in what he called "an extremely collaborative process."

"I think because the draft itself was trying to make an argument for why parody is a really powerful form ... we thought it made more sense for us to kind of make the brief itself an example of why this thing is worth defending, and why parody is really interesting and grabs people's attention," he adds.

Immediately after the first call with Novak's legal team, Gillis sat down and wrote 1,500 words in one go which he says was because of how excited he was about the "fun, entertaining, attention-grabbing" argument that he knew he could make.

His years of living and breathing satire and parody from writing for The Onion to teaching classes at Second City and speaking with college humor publications also didn't hurt, since he was already well-acquainted with the theory and importance of the form.

Gillis also consulted at times with The Onion's legal team and editor-in-chief since he found it a bit weird to be writing so publicly about the process and value of his site's own work, which he described as "kind of an example of why a disclaimer for parody is not a good idea."

One requirement of the brief is that Gillis must demonstrate that The Onion is an interested party (for starters, it was invoked in one of the early court rulings on the subject). He says there are two main reasons: Limitations on parody could hurt the company's business model, and could have a chilling effect on it and others.

There's a lot at stake, he says. There were several points Gillis wanted to make in the brief, but he knew above all else that he wanted it to be funny.

"It's like, everybody likes laughing," he says. "And sometimes I think these legal officials maybe get a little bit into their own heads about precedent and stuff, and lose track of just the function of why comedy is great and specifically why parody is great."

Members of The Onion's editorial team attend a team meeting in their Chicago office in 2020. Gillis says it employs about a dozen staff writers, plus contributors. Mike Gillis hide caption

Members of The Onion's editorial team attend a team meeting in their Chicago office in 2020. Gillis says it employs about a dozen staff writers, plus contributors.

There are certain misconceptions Gillis wanted to clear up for the Supreme Court including why it's so important for parody to be realistic and why labeling it as such upfront wouldn't only be unnecessary, but unhelpful.

But he also sees the brief as an opportunity to defend the role of parody at large. So, NPR asked, why does it matter?

The short answer is that it's an "extremely powerful rhetorical form that can't really be mimicked by a serious, dry statement of criticism." The longer answer goes back thousands of years, to the etymological root of the word, and has to do with how even slightly tweaking a form can open readers' eyes to how "this thing that had this extremely elevated sense of itself is actually not infallible and can be criticized easily."

Gillis points to some examples of that in The Onion's archives: In 2012, the publication proclaimed North Korean leader Kim Jong-un "the sexiest man alive," and China's state-run agency republished that as fact, accompanied with a slideshow. Closer to home, a GOP congressman believed (and warned constituents about) a spoof story about Planned Parenthood opening up an $8 billion "Abortionplex."

Satirists aren't actively trying to trick readers, Gillis says. But when authoritarians fall for parody, "it really punctures their own sense of self-importance because they're showing that they're not a reasonable person."

These are particularly high-profile examples, because The Onion is such a prominent publication (in the brief it deadpans that it "has grown into the single most powerful and influential organization in human history," which employs 350,000 journalists and also "operates the majority of the world's transoceanic shipping lanes ... and proudly conducts tests on millions of animals daily.").

But, as the brief points out, "the quality and taste of the parody is irrelevant" to the degree of legal protection it deserves.

"First Amendment rights should cover everyone and not just people who are able to afford large legal teams or who have an established track record of being parodists," Gillis tells NPR. "I just think it's a blanket law that everybody should be able to rally behind. And that is kind of an obvious win for all people."

The more literacy ordinary people have about the workings of satire and parody, the better off the conversation around it will be, he says. People have gotten mad at satirists for thousands of years, Gillis adds, but the current technological and political environment means that spoofs can be interpreted and critiqued in a more personal (and often partisan) way.

If there's one thing he wants people to know about parody, it's that "there's nothing going wrong if, for a little bit, you're taken in by a comedian," whether that's in the pages of a satirical news site or in the audience of a stand-up show.

"Having a bit more space afforded to satirists to do what they have been doing for thousands of years would be great," he says. "I think the more people that can consider that it's OK that they're being fooled briefly for parody to work, and to not take offense at that and to realize that that's just part of the form, I think that would be wonderful."

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Author of The Onion Supreme Court brief explains why parody is worth defending - NPR

Jury shoots down First Amendment claims of former Sullivan County teacher Tennessee Lookout – Tennessee Lookout

A federal jury has rejected the free-speech claims of a Sullivan County teacher suspended after parents complained about his expletive-laced social media posts on topics ranging from masking during the COVID pandemic to former President Donald Trump.

In what was the first test case of a U.S. Supreme Court landmark decision granting First Amendment speech protection to the prayers of Washington state high school football coach Joe Kennedy, a jury in U.S. District Court in Greenville, Tenn., last week ruled against former Sullivan County teacher Jeremy McLaughlin.

McLaughlin was suspended for three days without pay in September 2020 after parents complained about social media posts he made while off-duty. Citing the Kennedy decision, McLaughlin insisted then-Sullivan County Schools chief David Cox violated his free-speech rights.

Cox countered that although McLaughlins profanity-filled posts supporting masking and opposing Trump were unprofessional and factored into his suspension decision, the commentary was not the sole basis for it.

Instead, Cox pointed to another social media post in which McLaughlin appeared to encourage people outside the Sullivan County school system to vote against in-person learning in what was supposed to be a survey of teachers within the school system.

In the run-up to last weeks trial, a judgeruled McLaughlins social media posts on hot-bed political controversies were protected speech. What was not protected was McLaughlins social media urgings to his followers to participate in a poll about school re-openings meant only for teachers.

Such dishonest behavior was tantamount to cheating, and, therefore, remained punishable as conduct unbecoming of a professional teacher, attorney Chris McCarty wrote on behalf of Cox in a pre-trial statement of facts.

After a two-day trial last week, jurors sided with Cox.

Has Director Cox proven by a preponderance of the evidence that he would have taken the same action to suspend Jeremy McLaughlin for three days even in the absence of all (his) protected speech? the verdict form read. Yes.

Although McLaughlin lost his case, he was successful in testing the bounds of the U.S. Supreme Court decision that granted free-speech protection to Kennedy, who was fired for praying on the 50-yard line after football games.

In the run-up to last weeks trial, U.S. District Judge Clifton Corker ruled McLaughlins social media posts on hot-bed political controversies were protected speech under the Kennedy decision. That ruling put the burden on Cox to prove he suspended McLaughlin for reasons other than those controversial posts.

At trial, McCarty argued Cox did, in fact, have another reason for his suspension decision McLaughlins suggestion on social media that outsiders could cast votes in an August 2020 online survey designed to only poll Sullivan County teachers on whether the school system should return to in-person learning.

McLaughlin, court records show, posted a link to the survey on his Facebook page and wrote, If you were a teacher and had the anonymous link, you should fill it out.

Suspension followed parents upset

The brouhaha over McLaughlins social media posts began after a contentious Sullivan County Board of Education meeting in August 2020 at which more than a dozen parents and students urged the board to reopen schools, which had been shut down in the early months of the pandemic.

After McLaughlin spoke up at the meeting in favor of continued on-line instruction, parent Mandi Mittelsteadt took to Facebook to complain about McLaughlin and posted copies of McLaughlins social media posts she deemed objectionable. She wrote a letter of complaint to Cox and urged other parents to do the same. A handful did. Cox suspended McLaughlin soon after.

The posts Mittelsteadt cited as objectionable centered on masking and Trump, although she also included a complaint about the survey post.

Please stop clapping for nurses and giving them a (expletive) raise. Sincerely, teachers, McLaughlin posted on May 7, 2020.

If youre in public and youre not wearing a mask, please know that you are part of the problem, McLaughlin wrote in a June 25, 2020, post. You dont know if you have it. You dont know if youre spreading it. You are keeping everyone from moving out of this crisis because you are a spoiled, selfish child.

That post included a meme depicting the fictional character Ron Burgundy in the Anchorman movies and a Burgundy catchphrase: Go (expletive) yourself, San Diego.

A July 2020, McLaughlin post stated, Not wearing a mask doesnt make you look strong. It makes you look like a selfish piece of (expletive). Saying you have a medical condition and you cant wear a mask makes you look like a lying selfish piece of (expletive).

That post also included a meme a screenshot from a viral YouTube video unrelated to masking that shows a student seated at a computer station and pointing his finger and a second student smiling toward the camera.

Saw a guy at Food City walking around in an iridescent blue fishnet face mask, McLaughlin wrote in another July 2020 post at issue in the case. Brother, you dont look clever. You look like youre wearing your side chicks panties on your face.

McLaughlin also posted in July 2020 a news story with a photograph of former President Donald Trump and the headline, Trump floats delaying the November election. He does not have that authority. McLaughlin wrote on that post, Absolutely (expletive) not.

In an August 2020 post, McLaughlin featured a copy of a tweet from a man who wrote, My son is wearing a (Make America Great Again) cap and a Vote Trump 2020 button. Hes been spat on, punched and verbally abused. I hate to think what will happen when he leaves the house.

McLaughlin wrote in response to the copy of the tweet, Father of the year.

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Jury shoots down First Amendment claims of former Sullivan County teacher Tennessee Lookout - Tennessee Lookout

Siri & Glimstad LLP: Law Firms join forces with the U.S. Army Soldiers to protect first amendment and Religious Freedom Restoration Rights -…

SAN ANGELO, Texas, Oct. 5, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- On October 3, 2022, a complaint was filed in the San Angelo District Court against the United States Army alleging violations of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. In that complaint, on behalf of 10 Army soldiers, Plaintiffs allege that the United States Army has systemically denied religious accommodation requests to its mandatory COVID -19 vaccination policy, while simultaneously granting thousands of secular exemptions. All Plaintiffs were found by a Chaplain in the Army to hold a sincere religious belief that was substantially burdened by the vaccine mandate.

To date, based on publicly available information, the Army has only granted 32 requests for religious accommodation while issuing denials to close to 2,000, with over 8,000 awaiting final decision.

Plaintiffs are represented by attorneys Aaron Siri, Elizabeth A. Brehm, and Wendy Cox at Siri | Glimstad; Chris Wiest, Attorney at Law, PLLC; and Thomas Bruns, with Bruns, Connell, Vollmar & Armstrong, LLC.

SOURCE Siri & Glimstad LLP

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Siri & Glimstad LLP: Law Firms join forces with the U.S. Army Soldiers to protect first amendment and Religious Freedom Restoration Rights -...

Texas Broadcasters Thank Sen. Cruz for Dedication to First Amendment, Effort to Rein in Big Tech – Senator Ted Cruz

Texas Broadcasters Thank Sen. Cruz for Dedication to First Amendment, Effort to Rein in Big Tech | Senator Ted Cruz

WASHINGTON, D.C. The Texas Association of Broadcasters has sent a letter to U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas), member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, thanking him for his work on the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA), to protect the First Amendment and his efforts to rein in Big Tech.

The Texas Association of Broadcasters wrote:

On behalf of the 1,200+ local Radio and Television stations serving the people of Texas, I am writing to thank you for working with Sens. Kennedy and Klobuchar to craft improvements to S. 673, the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA).

Your dedication to robust community journalism and the First Amendment is immensely appreciated and we are hopeful that, once in law, this measure will meaningfully advance our interest in negotiating effectively with individual Big Tech firms regarding the terms of use for our content.

While much work remains on this front, know that Texas broadcasters are grateful for your leadership and diligence in helping to address our concerns.

See the letterhere.

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Texas Broadcasters Thank Sen. Cruz for Dedication to First Amendment, Effort to Rein in Big Tech - Senator Ted Cruz

Coach’s Post-Game Prayer on Football Field Protected by the First Amendment – Lexology

Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, 142 S. Ct. 2407 (June 27, 2022)

In the most significant case to address the school/religion balance in at least two decades, a six-member majority of the U.S. Supreme Court in Kennedy v. Bremerton Sch. Dist.,, held that the Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses of the First Amendment protected high school football coach Joseph Kennedys personal religious observance after a football game from restriction by his employer, the Bremerton School District.

Mr. Kennedy engaged in what the Supreme Court found to be a sincerely motivated religious exercise involving giving thanks through prayer briefly on the playing field at the conclusion of each game he coaches. But the school district, citing concerns about violating the First Amendments Establishment Clause, as interpreted by the Supreme Courts endorsement analysis in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), suspended Mr. Kennedy.

In a majority opinion written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, the Supreme Court held that the suspension violated Mr. Kennedys rights under the Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses. The Court explained that unlike earlier school prayer cases like Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962), and School District of Abington Township v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203 (1963), [t]he contested exercise here does not involve leading prayers with the team; the District disciplined Mr. Kennedy only for his decision to persist in praying quietly without his students after three games in October 2015. Mr. Kennedys prayers were not publicly broadcast or recited to a captive audience, students were not required or expected to participate, and the prayers were made after the games ended, when Mr. Kennedy was no longer acting within the course and scope of his employment. In short, [t]here is no indication in the record that anyone expressed any coercion concerns to the District about the quiet, postgame prayers that Mr. Kennedy asked to continue and that led to his suspension.

In the absence of such coercion, the school district went too far. As the majority put it, [w]e are aware of no historically sound understanding of the Establishment Clause that begins to make it necessary for government to be hostile to religion in this way. Erroneously relying on the Lemon test, the districts actions rested on a mistaken view that it had a duty to ferret out and suppress religious observances even as it allows comparable secular speech. The Constitution, Justice Gorsuch concluded, neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito filed concurring opinions. Justice Sonia Sotomayor filed a dissenting opinion, in which Justices Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan joined. The dissent criticized the majority for giving almost exclusive attention to the Free Exercise Clauses protection of individual religious exercise, while giving short shrift to the Establishment Clauses prohibition on state establishment of religion. The dissent also faulted the majority for overrul[ing] Lemon v. Kurtzman, which calls into question decades of subsequent precedents.

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Coach's Post-Game Prayer on Football Field Protected by the First Amendment - Lexology

In abortion memo released to employees, the University of Idaho is right and wrong – Idaho Capital Sun

The Sept. 23 memo from the University of Idahos general counsel concerning the discussion of abortion by employees was basically right according to Idaho law, although overly broad in its application prohibiting speaking about contraception. The process of notifying faculty and staff should have been handled differently by the administration.

In every way, the state laws concerning abortion are a mess, creating great confusion.

Under current laws, the state is exerting power to eliminate much of peoples right to free speech in the public arena. This freedom is not only protected under the First Amendment and the Idaho Constitution, but also a basic human right and the laws violates many peoples right to freedom of religion and speech.

In a Sept. 29 open letter on the states abortion ban, 19 religious leaders from across the state argues no government committed to human rights and democracy can privilege the teachings of one religion over another. Let us be clear: Religion does not agree on the moral considerations surrounding abortion and the value of one life over another. But we do agree on religious freedom.

Boise public advocate Mike Satz agrees. Satz, a former law professor and executive director of UI Boise, was director of the Idaho 97 Project, a nonprofit group that supports the democratic process.

This is indicative of tyranny, Satz said about the laws. The (religious leaders) letter is right, we are seeing a religious demonization of bodily autonomy. Bodily autonomy is a fundamental human right which is being swept aside with all these laws.

Back to the argument about the memo and the laws disrupting free speech, Satz said the First Amendment is all over this issue, along with Idahos free speech statutes. However, he added, there are two parts to the be considered: The No Public Funds for Abortion law and the operation of law. These are creating a large amount of confusion in what can and cannot be said.

Adding more confusion, he said, is the fact law is all about risk and the degree of risk involved. The laws are so muddled, he said, no one can determine the degree of risk involved.

The memo says this is the state law, Satz said. That is dishonest legally. The First Amendment is also the law. The only group who can fully answer this is the judiciary. The memo is correct: Idaho public employers cannot talk about abortion and the employees must follow the law; the university must comply.

However, he added, also under law students still have the right to learn and professors are accountable for making sure students understand concepts (the Pico case, https://mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/103/board-of-education-island-trees-union-free-school-district-v-pico). The big problem here becomes the issue of neutrality as expressed in the memo.

A professor can have pro-life and pro-choice students in a class discussion and in just trying to maintain class decorum could be considered as not neutral by either side, he said. It creates a chilling effect, and this series of laws are just that. This is being shown now when the faculty are too afraid of giving their names in news stories.

This is not how we educate people. This is a muddled mess of new law plus older law, some of which is lifted from territorial law, which is where you get the dont talk about birth control mess.

The right to free speech is not absolute. The U.S. Supreme Court has created some limitations, especially speech which is hateful or endangers peoples lives. However, the same court codified free speech in the 1969 Brandenburg vs. Ohio case which it ultimately said the government cannot punish speech. Justice Hugo Black, in his concurrence, said all speech is immune from prosecution.

Except, perhaps, in Idaho where state law now specifically says people cannot discuss certain topics. What this appears to be is a power move by certain religious and/or political groups to remove basic human rights from the states residents.

While the unsigned UI memo may be correct according to state law, it begs the question about the impact on federal law in the state. It also brings to mind the quote from President George Washington: If freedom of speech is taken away then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter.

Link:

In abortion memo released to employees, the University of Idaho is right and wrong - Idaho Capital Sun

How Alex Jones twists the Constitution in his Sandy Hook trial – Danbury News Times

Alex Jones has, experts say, used the U.S. Constitution as both a shield and a sword.

When Jones first started talking about the Sandy Hook shooting, the day of the massacre itself, he said it was a manufactured crisis intended to create enough sympathy and outrage to enact gun control legislation.

Now that he faces the second of three civil trials to decide damages after courts in both Connecticut and Texas handed down a default judgment in favor of Sandy Hook families, he has claimed that his First Amendment rights to free speech have been limited by a judge hes called a tyrant.

During the current trial, Chris Mattei, attorney for the Sandy Hook families, played a video of Jones saying Sandy Hook and the Aurora, Colo. movie theater shooting a few months prior were false flag operations designed as a pretense to limit the Second Amendment and part of a global conspiracy out to kill and enslave them, Mattei said, quoting Jones.

Earlier in the trial, Jones went on Infowars and told his viewers they came for the Second Amendment with Sandy Hook and now they were coming for the First Amendment, too.

The judge in the case, Barbara Bellis, has attempted to avoid the whole issue by barring Jones from saying in the courtroom that his free speech rights under the First Amendment have been compromised. This trial is about damages. Jones was already found liable for defamation.

The First Amendment is not an issue, Bellis said.

That has not stopped Jones from talking about it outside the courthouse.

We're supposed to be the land of the free, home of the brave, and they're using these dead children not just to try to get rid of the Second Amendment, but now the First Amendment, he said during a press conference on the courthouse steps.

There are limits to the First Amendment. It does not, for example, protect a right to spread misinformation.

It's very frustrating to see someone who has apparently, from all indications, been spreading knowing lies, said David Schulz, director of the Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic at Yale Law School. To try to hide behind the protections of the First Amendment is quite frustrating. It's not what the First Amendment protects. The Supreme Court has said that there's no First Amendment value in lies, and lies that cause harm can be punished.

While Jones might have the First Amendment right to say what he thinks on the air or in court, he cannot use his platform to lie about individuals if those lies cause harm.

He certainly has a right to express his opinion about the right to bear arms, but that's not what's going on, Schulz said. And he doesn't have the right to make up lies to try to fan the flames of, you know, Second Amendment advocates.

William Dunlap, a Constitutional law professor at Quinnipiac University, said there are many limits to the freedom of speech.

Both Congress and the states have a lot of law regulating or punishing speech, he said. "Among the categories of speech that are not protected completely by the First Amendment is defamation, which is what this case is all about.

Throughout the current trial, and the previous trial held in Texas, the question arose of whether or not Jones is a journalist and if Infowars practices journalism. The First Amendment protects not only freedom of speech but freedom of the press.

Opinions are protected, as are honest mistakes.

The Supreme Court over the years has been very careful to protect innocent mistakes when they're made by news organizations on issues of public concern, because, as it is explained, errors inevitably happen in the give-and-take of covering the news, particularly when you're under a deadline, Schulz said.

But Jones and Infowars, Schulz said, did not make an honest mistake when they suggested, year after year, that the parents were actors and the massacre never happened.

What has been going on here is a pattern over the years of repeating information that has been shown to be untrue, he said. The First Amendment says that when you're talking about matters of public concern, that there has to be a knowing falsehood.

Jones has said that he genuinely believed the Sandy Hook massacre was faked, but thats not good enough, according to Schulz.

You can misbelieve something, he said. But when something is so outrageous, so unbelievable, that only a reckless person would put it into circulation. would repeat it, that's not protected. And to continue it over a number of years, it's certainly conduct that can be punishable consistent with the First Amendment.

Ryan ONeill, a professor at Quinnipiac University and a partner with the Law Offices of Mark Sherman, practicing in the areas of criminal defense and defamation, said he believed Jones is being misleading.

Jones is not allowed to say in court that his Constitutional right to free speech is being violated. Hes also not allowed to say in court that he believed Sandy Hook was a calculated false flag maneuver to take away Second Amendment rights.

That, ONeill explained, is because Jones was already found liable.

I understand that he has a problem with the fact that he never had a jury decide whether he was liable, but that was decided by the judgment of the court, ONeill said. The problem is, that that judgment happened because he did not follow the rules of the court with respect to how information is supposed to be exchanged.

New Haven-based attorney Alex Taubes explained that there are rules in any court case.

Both sides have to comply with deadlines, both sides have to hand over to the other side their evidence, he said. Alex Jones wants to claim our system of government, or freedom of speech, open courts, as his savior, but when it came time to actually comply with court orders he refused to do so.

Its not just the court in Connecticut that issued a default judgment in favor of the Sandy Hook families because Jones had so flagrantly ignored the courts rules, specifically the rules on discovery. A judge in Texas decided similarly.

The fact that two judges in two different states reached the same conclusion about Alex Jones litigation conduct tells you, I think, that it was very substantial violations and it wasn't just something that was done by accident, ONeill said.

In ignoring the court's rules, Jones lost his chance to make a free speech argument.

He's talking about things that he would have had the opportunity to potentially argue if he had followed the rules, ONeill said. He didn't follow the rules, and so what Bellis is saying is, It doesn't matter whether you believed it, or what your beliefs are based on right now, because that issue has come and gone. You had the chance to litigate it. You decided not to follow our rules when litigating it, and I had no other choice but to sanction you by deciding the issue of liability.

That is, unless plaintiffs decide to raise questions of motive themselves. If Mattei and his colleagues suggest, as they have, that Jones motive was money, that allows Jones to offer a counter argument.

ONeill called it a calculated high-risk, high-reward scenario. Every time the plaintiffs lawyers raise political issues, Jones lawyer, Norm Pattis, says they opened the door.

Injecting some of these things into the case certainly does arouse more negative emotions toward Alex Jones when they frame it in their way, ONeill said. But it does allow opportunities for Pattis in the defense to start injecting some of these other things that can create more distractions, or also create more justifications in the minds of some folks that might be deciding this.

On the day of the Sandy Hook shooting, literally as the parents were learning that their children had died, Jones was on the air claiming that the massacre was a manufactured false flag operation intended to take away his and his viewers Second Amendment right to bear arms.

Plaintiffs have argued in court that Jones was essentially fear-mongering, that his real motivation was and remains money.

It's come out in the trial so far that he had sponsors, advertisers that were gun manufacturers, and that they were courting other gun manufacturers as advertisers, said University of Connecticut journalism professor Amanda J. Crawford.

The Second Amendment has been, to some degree, a pivot point on which the strategies of both the plaintiffs and defense have rested. When Pattis questions a plaintiff on the stand, he asks whether or not they knew how Jones felt about the Second Amendment, and how the shooting changed their anti-gun activism.

He wants to convince the jury that the goal of the plaintiffs is to silence Jones free speech to talk about guns, that this is a plot to undermine Jones because they don't like what he believes about guns, Crawford said.

There is a connection between mass shootings and gun sales, as Dunlap said: Every time that there is a mass shooting or some other atrocity involving guns, that the sale of guns would go up, because the manufacturers and organizations like the National Rifle Association would say, OK, now they're going to come after your guns.

Claiming that your Second Amendment rights are at risk is a business and advocacy strategy Dunlap said has been going on for years, for decades. Proposals for gun legislation may make it harder for certain people to get guns, those laws are not unconstitutional, he said.

Though he said he disagrees with the substance of Jones arguments disagree with them in a big way Dunlap said using the Bill of Rights to defend your beliefs is, in and of itself, why the Bill of Rights exists.

There aren't very many individual protections in the Constitution itself, but in the Bill of Rights, in the post Civil War amendments, are a lot of rights that I think people are entirely justified in using to protect their behavior, he said.

Jones cannot speak on the record, in court, about the First Amendment, something Crawford sees as a bit of a missed opportunity.

Jones spread misinformation about a national (and local) tragedy. A discussion on the record, in court on where First Amendment protections begin and end might have been valuable to our society.

The court has said that because he didn't cooperate, he can't make his First Amendment argument, she said. Does that help our conversation about what is misinformation, what's allowed in the First Amendment? Not at all.

The default judgment is good for the families, Crawford said. It means they dont actually have to prove liability, just the extent of the damage Jones caused. But that also means the discourse is limited.

If you're looking at this as a case that is important in our current moment, about how do we deal with misinformation through the institutions that exist, from an academic perspective its somewhat disappointing that we don't get to have a trial that deals with the merits of this case, she said.

Jones did not explicitly name many of the people who are suing him (though he did name and publicly mock father Robbie Parker, who took the stand recently). But there will be no serious discussion about what Crawford called the finer points of libel.

There will be no arguments about whether or not his speech was protected by the First Amendment, she said. There'll be no arguments about group libel, and whether or not he actually libeled, defamed or inflicted emotional distress on individuals that he did not name.

The default judgment may have been warranted, Crawford said, but it hands Jones a talking point, the ability to claim on television, in press conferences and everywhere else outside of the courtroom, that his rights have been stolen.

He will forever be able to argue that he didn't have a trial on the merits, that he was hamstrung by the legal system, she said. He gets to prove his argument that they were out to get him.

He gets to say that this was the government going after his First Amendment rights, because he didn't get to make that case, she said.

The rest is here:

How Alex Jones twists the Constitution in his Sandy Hook trial - Danbury News Times