Call of Duty In-Game Humvees are Not Trademark Infringement – The National Law Review

More than 250,000 Humvees have been built since the 1980s, making them a distinct feature of the nations military history over the past quarter-century. As a result, the vehicle has become a recognizable staple in military-themed movies, television shows, newscasts, and video games. According to a group of curious law professors, the Humvee has been featured in over 1,000 movies and shows. But the maker of Humvees thought the inclusion of its military vehicles in the wildly successfulCall of Dutyvideo games infringed on its trademark rights. The Southern District of New York disagreed, however, and reaffirmed that video games, such as movies and television shows, can feature real-life trademarks, such as Humvees, without infringing on the owners trademark. SeeAM Gen. LLC v. Activision Blizzard, Inc., 17 Civ. 8644 (GBD), 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57121 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2020). Citing the First Amendment, the District Court determined the game developer could not be held liable for trademark infringement for featuring Humvees in itsCall of Dutyvideo games. Dismissing the lawsuit, the court found the video game maker had the right to use a real-life well-known military vehicle in an expressive work focused on realistically depicting modern combat and warfare.

In 1983, the United States Department of Defense contracted with AM General LLC to build the Humvee, which is still an essential vehicle for military operations not only in the United States but in over 50 countries. In the past, AM General has granted licenses to companies looking to use the Humvee trademark in connection with a wide variety of products, including video games, movies, and television series. Activision Blizzard Inc. developed the first-person shooter seriesCall of Duty, which is characterized by its realism, cinematic set-pieces, and fast-paced multiplayer mode. Selling over 130 copies, theCall of Dutygames depict Humvees in various wayssometimes the vehicle is mentioned in dialogue and can be seen in the background, and other times players can assume control of a Humvee. Additionally, Humvees are used in trailers and strategy guides for the games. Activision also licensed a toy company to manufacture toys related to the game, two of which are vehicles with distinctive Humvee elements.

AM General sent Activision a cease-and-desist letter objecting to the use of Humvees in games and toys. After Activision released another game in the series containing Humvees, AM General filed lawsuit for trademark and trade dress infringement. Activision argued its use of the Humvees was non-infringing free speech in an expressive work.

Courts have traditionally interpreted the Lanham Act to avoid suppressing protected speech under the First Amendment when the defendants product is artistic or expressive. TheRogerstest has been used by courts to allow artistic or expressive works to make use of trademarks under most circumstances without facing liability under the Lanham Act.SeeBattle of the Empires: Permissive Trademark Infringement in Creative Works.Under this test, the balance [between trademark interests and First Amendment speech interests] will normally not support application of the [Lanham] Act unless [the use of the trademark] has no artistic relevance to the underlying work whatsoever, or, if it has some artistic relevance, unless [the use of the trademark] explicitly misleads as to the source of the content of the work. In the Second Circuit, this test is applicable to any work of artistic expression.

TheRogerstest is a two-prong inquiry. Under the first prong, the court determines whether the use of the trademark has any artistic relevance to the underlying work whatsoever. This is not a rigorous inquiry, and in fact, if the contested use has [any] artistic relevance, the court must proceed to the second prong of the test. The second prong considers whether the use explicitly misleads as to the source or the content of the work. A finding of likelihood of confusion must be particularly compelling to outweigh the First Amendment interest. The evaluation of misleadingness is subject to thePolaroidfactors, which assess consumer confusion. In cases where there is a persuasive explanation that the use of the trademark was an integral element of artistic expression, courts have found the artistically relevant use outweighs a moderate risk of confusion. An integral element is one that communicate[s] ideasand even social messages, either through many familiar literary devices (such as characters, dialogue, plot, and music or through features distinctive to the medium (such as the players interaction with the virtual world).

Applying the Rogers test, the Southern District of New York found the use of Humvees inCall of Dutyhad artistic relevance actual vehicles used by the military created a realistic and lifelike gaming experience. Amplifying, the court found the use of Humvees in the video game easily met the artistic relevance requirement by giving players a sense of a particularized reality of being part of an actual elite special forces operation and serv[ing] as a means to increase specific realism of the game. Therefore, the use of Humvees served an artistic purpose and had artistic value.

Relying on thePolaroidfactors, the court found the use of Humvees was not explicitly misleading. In balancing the factors strength of the plaintiffs mark, degree of similarity, proximity of the products, bridging the gap, evidence of actual confusion, good faith, quality of defendants product, and consumer sophistication the Southern District found the inclusion of Humvees in the game was not misleading and did not give rise to consumer confusion as to the source of the game (i.e., no one would think Call of Duty was made or sponsored by the maker of Humvees).

The court granted summary in favor of Activision who presented a persuasive explanation regarding the Humvee use as an integral element of the artistic expressionthe uses of Humvees in theCall of Dutygames enhance the games realism. The judge proclaimed [i]f realism is an artistic goal, then the presence in modern warfare games of vehicles employed by actual militaries undoubtedly furthers that goal.

This ruling in favor of freedom of expression was not so much legally groundbreaking as it was the latest to reaffirm that video games, like movies and television shows, can feature real-life trademarks that have artistic value to the work without paying for a license. To hold otherwise would allow private companies to dictate and limit others artistic expression and creative free speech giving trademark owners a monopoly over reality.

Continued here:

Call of Duty In-Game Humvees are Not Trademark Infringement - The National Law Review

Officials warn voter intimidation will not be tolerated at polls – WDJT

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var fullDuration = rawVideoElem.duration * 1000; var current_time = Math.floor(rawVideoElem.currentTime); console.log("raw timeupdate: " + fullCurrent + " out of " + fullDuration); if ( current_time > 0 && ( fullCurrent >= (fullDuration - 50) )){ var currId = playerState.VIDEO_ID; var newMediaId = WVM.getNextPlaylistIndex(currId); if(newMediaId){ console.log("loading new video from rawtimeupdate"); WVM.load_video(newMediaId, true, playerState.ORIGINAL_ID); } } if(!$('.vjs-loading-spinner').hasClass('badspinner')){ $('.vjs-loading-spinner').addClass('badspinner') } }; } WVM.reinitRawEvents = function(playerId){ var playerState = WVM['player_state' + playerId]; var rawVideoElem = document.getElementById('html5-video-' + WVM['player_state' + playerId]['ORIGINAL_ID'] + '_html5_api'); //COMPLETE EENT if( WVM['player_state' + playerId].COMPLETE_EVENT){ rawVideoElem.removeEventListener('ended', WVM.rawCompleteEvent, false); } rawVideoElem.addEventListener('ended', WVM.rawCompleteEvent, false); 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MADISON, Wis. (CBS 58) State and local leaders believe Election Day in Wisconsin will run with few issues but stand ready to swiftly address any forms of voter intimidation or acts of violence.

I am very confident that we will have a safe and secure voting process in Wisconsin and that things are going to go smoothly at the polls tomorrow, Attorney General Josh Kaul said in a conference by phone.

Kaul said people have a right to free speech but it cannot interfere with someone elses right to vote.

Where the line gets crossed is when you go from exercising your own rights to threatening somebody elses safety, interfering with somebody elses right to exercise their own first amendment rights, Kaul said. What cant happen is that they are intimidating or threatening or putting people in a state of duress if those other folks are trying to exercise their first amendment rights.

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett echoed those sentiments and affirmed the city is prepared for any potential issues.

We will have a lot of mechanisms in place, Barrett said in a video conference. We will not in any fashion tolerate intimidation, we are not allowing guns at the polling places. This is a day for our democracy. All the political rhetoric is over. Tomorrow is a day to vote.

In addition to local and state law enforcement resources monitoring the issue, the U.S. Department of Justice announced it is sending personnel to 44 cities and counties around the country to monitor any potential voter intimidation acts. The effort is part of a regular compliance with the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

In addition to issues on Election Day, officials say they are also prepared to handle any potential unrest following the results of the election. Kaul said law enforcement will respect peoples right to protest, but violence will not be tolerated.

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Officials warn voter intimidation will not be tolerated at polls - WDJT

Houston police are not going to tolerate criminal activity on Election Day, Chief Acevedo says – KHOU.com

HOUSTON Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo says it will be all hands on deck on Election Day with plenty of police presence to keep the peace.

He said law enforcement in Houston and other big cities are on alert. They will be working with state and federal agencies to ensure everyone can vote in a safe, secure environment free of harassment and intimidation. The chief said police will not tolerate criminal activity.

We support the First Amendment rights of anyone, regardless of ideology, but there's a distinct line between First Amendment activity and criminal activity, the chief said.

He expects Houston to remain peaceful based on past experience.

Im proud of the fact that here in Houston, we're Houstonians. We're not Republicans. We're not Democrats. We're Houstonians and most Houstonians have come together.

If anyone who sees questionable behavior including harassment or intimidation Acevedo said they should alert the nearest officer or call 911.

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Houston police are not going to tolerate criminal activity on Election Day, Chief Acevedo says - KHOU.com

FSU Student Reinstated as School’s Senate President After First Amendment Win, but Will the University Pay a Price? – CBN News

Florida State student Jack Denton has been reinstated by the university's student Supreme Court after he was removed from his position for sharing his beliefs on transgenderism and abortion.

The Christian Post (CP) reports the student Supreme Court ruled Monday that the student Senate violated Denton's First Amendment rights and its own conduct by removing him from office.

"It's really big. It's absolutely critical," Alliance Defending Freedomlegal counsel Logan Spena told the CP. "What happened here was just related to Mr. Denton's religious speech on his political views. There was no basis other than that."

Denton's case shows students around the nation that they're protected by the First Amendment, Spena said.

"Removing Denton as Senate president violated his constitutional rights under the First Amendment; and we order a writ of mandamus ordering his reinstatement as Senate president," the court said in its decision on his case.

The case against Denton began last June when he messaged a private Catholic student group chat writing: "Everyone should be aware that Blacklivesmatter.com, Reclaim the Block, and the ACLU all advocate for things that are explicitly anti-Catholic," reported FSU's student newspaper. The paper received screenshots of the chat from an anonymous source.

Denton also said transgenderism, abortion, and the defunding of police departments contradict the Catholic Church's teachings on the common good and are "grave evils."

After a June 3 no-confidence vote failed to remove Denton as Senate president, an online petition gathering more than 6,000 signatures from students, alumni, and other members of the university community succeeded in his removal, according to FSUNews.com.

Denton, 21, a devout Catholic, said his comments were private and not intended to insult or bring harm to anyone, but were meant to reflect Catholic doctrine.

"Those messages were simply stated as fact on the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and what we believe as Catholics. I would not say those things in a public setting, in the Senate, or for the purpose or intention of hurting anyone," Denton said. "That was obviously not my intention whatsoever and I am just sick to my stomach that this has hurt senators and the Senate," FSUNews.com reported.

ADF attorneys answered for Denton by filing a lawsuit against his removal from office against FSU in both federal and university court.

The federal suit against FSU continues, but university officials have contended the school is not liable for his removal since it was done by the student government. However, school officials supervised the student Senate session when Denton was removed from his office, according to the CP.

Tyson Langhofer, director of the Alliance's Center for Academic Freedom, heralded the student court's decision.

"We commend the FSU Supreme Court for acting swiftly and decisively to reinstate Jack to his position as FSU's Student Senate president while his federal lawsuit continues, and for acknowledging the violations of his constitutionally protected right to free speech," Langhofer said in a statement. "All students should be able to peacefully share their personal convictions without fear of retaliation."

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FSU Student Reinstated as School's Senate President After First Amendment Win, but Will the University Pay a Price? - CBN News

In other news … new Supreme Court to hear potentially sweeping religious freedom case this week – Deseret News

When the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly legalized same-sex marriage five years ago, Justice Samuel Alitos dissent warned of ensuing conflicts between religious objectors and those determined to stamp out every vestige of dissent.

Just last month, he joined fellow dissenter Justice Clarence Thomas in calling on the court to reverse the landmark ruling that they claim has made it easier for courts and governments to dismiss religious liberty concerns about marriage.

On Wednesday, all nine justices will hear one of those predicted conflicts in what could be the courts most far-reaching religious freedom case of the term. The appeal to the high court comes from Catholic Social Services and two foster moms who claim Philadelphia government violated their First Amendment religious exercise rights when it required the charity to evaluate same-sex couples who want to be foster parents. The city says the requirement conforms with its nondiscrimination clause that all foster care agencies must comply with.

The case is one of several around the country pitting faith-based social service providers against states and cities struggling to enforce nondiscrimination law protecting their LGBTQ communities and respect religious freedom. But its not just the fate of faith-based providers of social services thats at stake in the final outcome.

Briefs filed by cities, states, childrens rights organizations, LGBTQ advocates, legal scholars and religious groups are also taking sides on whether a 30-year-old Supreme Court precedent that is central to the case should be scrapped. The 1990 ruling that upended and redefined how many First Amendment religious rights cases are addressed was authored by the late Justice Antonin Scalia, a mentor to the courts newest member, Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

Depending on how the new conservative majority on the court addresses that question, the final ruling by the end of June could have widespread ramifications on balancing the rights between religious and secular interests that go beyond the foster care dispute, which both sides in the case have said put their communitys most vulnerable children at risk.

If (Scalias opinion) is overruled, there could be a complete reworking of not just individual laws from which religious people will regularly claim exemptions, but the whole idea of what it means to be an American and of the Constitution itself, said Frederick Gedicks, a BYU law professor who joined a brief opposing Catholic Social Services.

In March 2018, a newspaper article reported Catholic teachings against same-sex marriage would prevent Catholic Social Services in Philadelphia from certifying legally gay married couples as eligible foster parents.

The story alarmed city officials and within days the City Council passed a resolution that condemned discrimination that occurs under the guise of religious freedom and the city stopped contracting with agencies that wouldnt evaluate the eligibility of same-sex couples.

Two months later Catholic Social Services and two single moms who have fostered children through the agency for decades sued the city, arguing that banning religious organizations from taking part in a public program constitutes unlawful religious discrimination.

The mayor, City Council, Department of Human Services and other city officials have targeted (Catholic Social Services) and attempted to coerce it into changing its religious practices, they said in their petition to the Supreme Court. The agency cannot make foster certifications inconsistent with its religious beliefs about sex and marriage.

Catholic Social Services and the families also believe Philadelphia officials are responding to a problem that doesnt exist.

Philadelphia has a diverse array of foster agencies, and not a single same-sex couple approached (Catholic Social Services) about becoming a foster parent between its opening in 1917 and the start of this case in 2018, they said in their Supreme Court petition filed by Becket, a public interest law firm that represents individuals and institutions in religious liberty cases.

Philadelphia officials argue that they arent targeting Catholic Social Services, which the city acknowledges is a point of light in the citys foster-care system, but holding all outside contractors to the same standards to protect children and all prospective parents. City policy prohibits organizations that discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation from receiving taxpayer funds, they said.

Excluding qualified parents based solely on their sexual orientation ... would do a disservice to children in the foster system (and) unnecessarily limit the pool of available parents, attorneys for Philadelphia officials argued in their Supreme Court brief.

Lower courts ruled in favor of city leaders, finding no evidence they discriminated against the faith-based provider, so Catholic Social Services appealed to the Supreme Court.

Similar legal and legislative battles are playing out across the country, as the Deseret News has reported, with both sides decrying that vulnerable children are caught in the middle of the clash. Government data show the number of foster children has climbed by 40,000 between 2012 and 2016, while the number of foster homes and foster parents continues to decline.

Both sides blame the other for exacerbating the problem. LGBTQ rights groups argue that religious objectors to same-sex marriage are limiting the pool of prospective foster parents, and faith-based charities say local governments are limiting resources to address the problem by not granting exemptions to nondiscrimination policies.

Central to the case is a 1990 Supreme Court decision that determined that laws and regulations dont violate First Amendment religious protections if they apply to everyone and are enforced neutrally. Scalia authored the standard commonly referred to as simply Smith, after a man who was denied unemployment benefits after he was fired from his job for using illegal drugs in a Native American religious ceremony. The court held the state didnt violate Smiths constitutional rights in denying the benefits.

But Catholic Community Services contends Philadelphia officials didnt comply with Smith because their enforcement was squarely aimed at the faith-based provider and the city has systems to offer exemptions. The lower courts disagreed.

But in its appeal to the high court, Becket not only restates how Philadelphia didnt comply with the Smith standard but urged the justices to get rid of that precedent altogether.

It is a big ask, acknowledged Nick Reaves, with Becket. But he explained some of the justices, including Alito, have suggested in recent opinions that it is time to reexamine Smith.

In its petition, Catholic Social Services says Scalias dire predictions of anarchy if religious exemptions were granted to laws and policies havent happened. Instead, Congress and several states passed laws in response to the Smith decision that have allowed governments to grant religious exemptions.

But in states without such laws, courts apply the Smith standard that has routinely resulted in curtailing religious exercise except in rare cases of laws directly targeting a religious practice, according to a brief filed for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Jurisdiction of the Armed Forces and Chaplaincy of the Anglican Church in North America; Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention; Church of God in Christ Inc.; and Samaritans Purse.

Smith has been a disaster for religious freedom, the brief, prepared by the law firm Kirton McConkie, declared. Its standard misguides courts into routinely denying constitutional protection for even the most obvious and avoidable invasions of the free exercise of religion.

The brief recommends the court replace Smith with a strict scrutiny standard spelled out in the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act that requires governments to justify imposing a substantial burden on religion by proving that the burden advances a compelling state interest in the least restrictive way.

A close review of the Courts leading free exercise decisions shows that, properly applied, the compelling interest test supplies the analytical tools to vindicate the freedom to exercise religion without preventing the government from carrying out its essential tasks, the brief states.

But in the brief Gedicks joined with four other constitutional scholars, it contends Smith ensures evenhandedness in the governments treatment of religion and that jettisoning Scalias precedent would open the floodgates to religious exemptions from civic obligations of almost every conceivable kind.

While a solidly conservative court and Alitos and Thomas criticism of the 2015 same-sex marriage ruling could signal which way the court could eventually rule in the foster care case, Supreme Court expert Amy Howe cautioned in her preview of the Fulton v. Philadelphia case, the court may not tackle all the questions the case poses.

If there are not five votes for the kind of sweeping ruling that (Catholic Social Services) seeks, the justices could once again sidestep the question, as it did in the case of the Colorado baker, by issuing a narrower ruling for example, by holding that Smith does not apply because the citys nondiscrimination policy is not neutral or generally applicable.

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In other news ... new Supreme Court to hear potentially sweeping religious freedom case this week - Deseret News

Snapping photos of your filled-in ballot is illegal in Illinois – Northern Star Online

Patrick Murphy

Voting booth in the Holmes Student Center in the Gallery Lounge on Oct.19.

DeKALB Taking a photo of a filled-in ballot violates Illinois voting laws and can constitute a Class 4 felony in Illinois, according to state legislation.

Kane County Circuit Clerk John Cunningham said the law is in place to deter vote-buying, the practice of paying voters to cast their ballot for specific candidates or paying them not to vote a certain way.

The law originates from Chapter 10, Section 29-9 of the Illinois Compiled Statutes and deals with the broader issue of unlawful observation of voting. Any person who knowingly marks his ballot or casts his vote so that it can be observed by another person, can be found guilty of a Class 4 felony, according to the statute.

Class 4 felonies are the lowest level felony offense, but being found guilty of one can still bring a minimum term of 1 year in prison, according to state law. However, Cunningham said he has yet to see someone charged just for photographing a ballot.

There have been little or none that I know of, he said.

There is the question of First Amendment rights Cunningham said, but he still advises against the practice in Illinois.

At this point in time, youre better off not doing that until the legislature passes legislation that allows that, Cunningham said. Illinoisans wanting to express their civic pride are better off sporting an I voted sticker.

Hawaii, California, Nebraska and Utah have passed legislation which makes the photographing of ballots expressly legal and a judge in New Hampshire struck down the states ballot selfie ban according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Editors note: This story was updated 11:20 a.m. Nov. 2 to correct an error. The story referred to the Second Amendment instead of the First Amendment.

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Snapping photos of your filled-in ballot is illegal in Illinois - Northern Star Online

Two Civil Rights Groups Sued The Trump Administration To Stop EO 13950 – JD Supra

The National Urban League and the National Fair Housing Alliance, both which are covered federal Government contractors and federal grant recipients, filed suit in the federal District Court for the District of Columbia. Their Complaint seeks a declaration that President Trumps September 22, 2020 Executive Order 13950 (Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping) violated the First and Fifth Amendments to the US Constitution. The two plaintiffs also seek a permanent injunction to stop USDOL Secretary Eugene Scalia from implementing EO 13950. Significantly, however, neither plaintiff sought either a temporary or preliminary injunction. The failure to seek an immediate injunction in the short term while the case is pending signals that the plaintiffs do not think they can prove EO 13950 is unconstitutional on its face, but rather only as implemented in particular ways they will prove at trial.

Nothing in this Complaint seeks to complain about or limit OFCCPs prosecution of federal contractors which deliver training programs unlawful pursuant to Executive Order 11246. Indeed, OFCCPs Complaint Hotline continues to receive inquiries and Complaints at a rapid pace about contractor training programs (see related story in this Week in Review immediately following this story reporting the remarks of OFCCPs Policy Director to Disability:IN). Moreover, as the follow-on Week In Review story also reports, OFCCP has now doubled-down on investigations of federal contractor training programs by also announcing last week a coming wave in 2021 of D&I Focused Reviews.

The National Urban Leagues and National Fair Housing Alliances Complaint is 61 pages in length, but makes only three legal claims, catalogued and briefly outlined below. The Complaint is unusual in that federal law requires only bare-bones notice pleading (typically 4 to 10 pages). Indeed, most plaintiffs try to be as sparse and general as they can be in their Complaints so as to not alert the defendant(s) to their full thinking and to allow the plaintiff room to later maneuver and include more specific claims in their earlier more general Complaint to avoid having to later amend their Complaint (usually with the Courts permission or denial thereof). Written as an attack on American treatment of African Americans since the Republics founding, and given the timing of its filing a week before the election, the Complaint reads much like a political pamphlet intended to engender discussion in the run-up to the election.

ULTRA VIRES ACTION IN VIOLATION OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT-VIEWPOINT DISCRIMINATION (pp. 53-55)

VIOLATION OF THE FIFTH AMENDMENT-VOID FOR VAGUENESS (pp. 55-56)

FIFTH AMENDMENT-VIOLATION OF EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE (pp. 57-59)

Editors Note: Para 21 is a claim that President Trump consciously intended EO 13950 as a tool to discriminate unlawfully based on race and sex against individuals which are people of color, women, and/or LGBTQ.

The Complaint also seeks class action status on behalf of all other similarly situated federal contractors and federal grantees. (See p. 50 of the Complaint). These class claims help illuminate what concerns the plaintiffs because the plaintiffs must explain to the Court all the common issues which allegedly bind together the purported Class Members. The common issues the plaintiffs allege in this case are:

Editors Note regarding the potential for the involvement of federal Government contractors and grantees in this case: If former Vice President Biden wins the election, one of his first acts in the White House will undoubtedly be to rescind EO 13950 given the hullabaloo which has burst out in the weeks following its publication. (In fact, that thought alone makes one wonder about the timing of this Complaint as yet another of the many pre-election posturings and maneuverings both political parties are currently undertaking involving Government contractors). If Mr. Biden were to win the election and were indeed to rescind EO 13950 on or after January 20, 2021 (Inauguration Day), this Complaint would become moot. The US Department of Justice would then undoubtedly file a Motion with the Court to Dismiss the Complaint, if the Plaintiffs did not first offer to voluntarily dismiss the action. NOTE: plaintiffs could have held their Complaint for filing another week or so to determine whether their Complaint were necessary or relevant in light of the election results.

If President Trump were to win re-election, the plaintiffs would presumably continue their litigation with full force. The plaintiffs would then likely in the next 6-12 months file a Motion to Certify a Class of all similarly situated federal contractors and federal grantees. If the Court were to certify a class of federal contractors and federal grantees, federal contractors and (possibly) federal grantees would then receive Notices in the mail from the plaintiffs inviting federal contractors/grantees to opt-in to the plaintiffs lawsuit against EO 13950. (Note: In federal class action lawsuits, Class Members must affirmatively agree to join the lawsuit (i.e. opt-in). This procedure is the reverse of many state law class action rules which presume that similarly situated Class Members are in the lawsuit unless they affirmatively opt out). We say it is only possible that federal grantees could be invited to join as Class Members because please remember that EO 13950 makes no statement about the obligations of federal grantee training. Rather EO 13950 assigned the Office of Management & Budget to gather information about grantees and report back with next step suggestions. See John Foxs Blog accompanying our original September 28, 2020 Week In Review reporting President Trumps September 22, 2020 signing of EO 13950. Accordingly, federal grantees thus far have nothing to complain about and will not have legal standing before the court until the federal government does something which allegedly adversely affects the constitutional rights of federal grantees.

Judge Amit P. Mehta, is a smart liberal first-term Obama appointee, who has practiced law for 23 years (since 1997) and has sat as a federal District Judge in the District of Columbia for the last 6 of those years (since 2014).

Tomorrows election will decide whether the Week in Review, as a practical matter, has only a few last stories coming in the future about EO 13950, or whether updates about the National Urban League case and Executive Order 13950 will now become a staple of the Week in Review for the remainder of the year and to the end of 2021.

Read all of our prior stories and Blogs about EO 13950, please see our Week In Review reporting:

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Two Civil Rights Groups Sued The Trump Administration To Stop EO 13950 - JD Supra

Disturbing Parallels in Crackdowns on Protesters in the U.S. and Hong Kong – brennancenter.org

The protests that erupted in opposition to police brutality against Black Americans this year have been met with disquieting, militarized responses by law enforcement agencies across the country. One of the most egregious examples occurred in Portland, Oregon, where the Department of Homeland Securitydeployedofficers to restore order over the objections of local authorities.

The grim scenes led tocomparisonsbetween the United States and authoritarian regimes throughout history. The most conspicuous analogue may be last summers protests over Hong Kongs independence from China. But despite clear tactical similarities between the anti-police brutality demonstrations in Portland and the widely celebrated pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong, the U.S. government opted to meet the Portland protesters with the same degree of force it denounced when perpetrated by the Chinese government, the First Amendment notwithstanding.

Both Hong Kong and the United States saw historically large outpourings of dissenters in response to moments that typify longstanding problems. In Hong Kong, a bill permitting the extradition of fugitives to mainland China stirred concern among citizens that the China-friendly government wascedingthe territorys semiautonomous status, whereas in the United States, the police killing of George Floyd served as the latest chapter in the countrysignoble historyof state-sanctioned anti-Blackness.

Hong Kong demonstratorsdefacedbuildings that displayed signs of Chinese sovereignty, and in Portland protesterstoppled statuesof historical American figures who owned slaves. In response to the paramilitary tactics utilized by police in both cities, protesters employed sometimes makeshift protective gear: tear gas was dispersed withleaf blowers, filtered viagas masks, and blocked withumbrellas. The demonstrators also used shields to defend themselves againstbatons, and they used lasers to thwartfacial recognition softwareand other forms ofpolice surveillance.

Law enforcement crackdowns on the demonstrations were similar too, made especially striking given the contrast between Chinas single-party regime and American democracy. In Hong Kong,security forces from the mainlandjoined efforts to repel protesters, while DHS sent camouflaged and maskedofficerswithout ID badges to Oregon. Law enforcement in both jurisdictions used minor infractions likejaywalkingto police the protests, andundercover officersandunmarked vehiclesroamed the streets. Predictably, the number of arrests in areas around the protests rocketed up while thenumber of protestersarrested in Portland is much smaller thanin Hong Kong, the percentage by population is nearly identical. Andparamilitary unitssuppressedthe press in both cities, blocking cameras, shoving and shooting journalists with nonlethal munitions, and pepper spraying news crews.

Both governments also employed invasive surveillance technology to gather information on the demonstrations. Authorities used social media monitoring toidentifyandarrestprotesters. Hong Kong policeseizedmore than 3,700 cell phones from protesters, precipitating the worry among activists that the phones were being implanted with spyware. TheNationrecently revealed that DHSusedcell phone cloning technology to intercept communications, leading to demands for an investigation from members of Congress.

But the same U.S. officials who criticized Americans demonstrating against racial injustice heaped unreserved praise upon the mass movement in Hong Kong. Less than two months after President Trumpdescribedthe Chinese governments intervention in Hong Kong as smothering Hong Kongs freedom, hethreatenedthat if Oregon Gov. Kate Brown did not arrest the Portland demonstrators, he would have the Federal Government do it for her. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnelldecriedBeijing as seeking to snuff out dissent in Hong Kong six months before hecalledthe Portland protesters an alliance of convenience between angry criminals. Attorney General Bill Barrcondemnedthe Chinese government for its values antitheticalto those we share in Western liberal democracies. Three months later, hecharacterizedthe marches in Portland as an assault on the government of the United States.

There are many other examples of violent government suppression of peaceful demonstrators around the United States, from the New York City Police Department assaulting peaceful protesters onnumerousoccasionsto the use oftear gasoutside the White House to clear the way for a presidential photo-op. Police misconductescalatedviolence at more than 180 protests nationwide.

We should be wary of the normalization of authoritarian suppression of dissent in the United States. We know too that Trump hasrefused to acceptthe premise of a peaceful transfer of power and advocated forvoter intimidation, again echoingauthoritarian rhetoric.

In the aftermath of Hong Kongs protests, Chinapassed legislationundermining the citys status as a democratic entity. American democracy has the benefit of being more mature, but we must still push back against the forces working to undermine it.

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Disturbing Parallels in Crackdowns on Protesters in the U.S. and Hong Kong - brennancenter.org

Young: Paying the bill for all that is Trump – Austin American-Statesman

The Trump presidency has been a collage of outrages.

The biggest outrage: Its all been our tab.

Like the three-dollar glasses of water billed to us by Mar-a-Lago when Trumps club raked in $37,500 hosting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Ahem. What did we pay for the oyster crackers?

In his four years in office, reports the Washington Post, Trumps businesses have reaped $8.1 million in business from taxpayers and supporters.

If this offends you, or if it doesnt, consider: The Justice Department has run up massive legal bills trying to get Trump out from under a defamation suit based on allegations of rape.

Former magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll accuses him of that. Trump calls her a liar. The Justice Department asserts that he cant defend himself and wants the federal government you and me to do that. A federal judge just nixed the idea.

Your tax dollars at work enriching this man and buffeting him from accountability for an accused felony.

In fact, the whole of the Carroll defamation suit, and the Justice Departments indefensible role in it he was Private Citizen Trump when the offense was alleged is analogous to this mans presidency.

The whole four years have been a battle by his appointed loyalists to keep him from testifying under oath.

Thats a hefty chunk of the first of Bob Woodwards two books on the Trump presidency.

Its called "Fear," which one assumes to mean a ruthless and wrathful leader. Instead, it should be called "Fear of a Subpoena."

The fact is for someone so practiced at lying, Donald Trump is just not very good at it.

Thats why former White House Counsel John Dowd fought with every sinew of his creaking body to keep Trump from an under-oath conversation with Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Dowd, who resigned over disagreements with Trump over his legal strategy in the Mueller investigation, knew that the moment Trump opened his mouth he would break the law.

Dowd, a former DOJ employee and expert defender of accused white-collar criminals, finagled a chance for Trump to obfuscate via written responses to Muellers questions.

This helped the greatest liar in our annals to lie that he was "totally exonerated" of obstructing justice and colluding with Russians and their handmaidens at Wikileaks.

Two years before Woodward reported that Trump also lied to this country about the severity and danger of the pandemic now ravaging the country, heres how Woodward ties up "Fear" in describing the frustrations of Trumps lawyer:

"In the political back-and-forth, the evasions, the denials, the tweeting, the obscuring, crying Fake News, the indignation, Trump had one overriding problem that Dowd knew but could not bring himself to tell the president: Youre a (bleeping) liar."

Woodward does not expurgate that. The record affirms that.

Notice how weakly Trump responded to the report that he called war dead "suckers" or the intelligence about Russians placing bounties on the heads of U.S. troops. He defended not visiting the gravesites of fallen U.S. soldiers at a cemetery outside Paris by saying the weather prevented him from going. For someone so practiced at lying, youd think he'd be better at it.

Instead, he's come to realize that his cult following doesnt care about those things. He might as well be standing before them wearing a rams head and asserting command of moon and stars. Theyre fine with it. Theyre believers.

Right now, however, a lot of Republican office holders are losing their religion. They face riding his coattails into oblivion.

One of them is South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who figures in one of Woodwards most telling anecdotes.

Graham was in the room at the White House, and expressed offense, when Trump referred to mostly black nations as "shithole countries."

The next day, the story having become an object of national conversation, Graham and Trump were on the golf course.

Trump said he didnt say what was reported.

Graham said, "Yeah, you did."

Trump pivoted, "Well, some people like what I said."

True. Some people we are about to see how many like a practicing liar and viper in the White House.

Vote for Trump if chaos, hatred, and dishonesty are also your values.

Longtime newspaperman John Young lives in Colorado. Email: jyoungcolumn@gmail.com.

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Trump expected to unleash clemency power after election, win or lose – The Detroit News

Washington President Donald Trump has exercised his clemency power with gusto in nearly four years in office, pardoning or commuting the sentences of more than three dozen convicts. But after next weeks election he will be unleashed.

Win or lose, Trump wont face electoral retribution for using his pardon power over federal crimes, which is his alone. That leaves little to stop him from trying to clear legal clouds from political allies, family members and others caught up in what hes persistently branded as unfair prosecutions.

Trump has already exercised his clemency power to reward friends and thwart cooperation with law enforcement, even when it might have some political cost, said Andrew Weissmann, who worked on Special Counsel Robert Muellers probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election.

If Trump were to lose the election, there would be little to keep him from pardoning all those around him and at his business to thwart any potential future investigations or cooperation, said Weissmann, who writes in a new book that Muellers team could have done more to hold Trump accountable. He might even pardon himself something no president has done or believed he needed to do.

Modern presidents have shown the breadth of pardon possibilities. Jimmy Carter offered a blanket pardon to draft dodgers. Bill Clinton pardoned a political donor, Marc Rich. Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon before he could be charged. Given that broad power, Trump could offer pardons of a range of people those convicted and in jail, in the midst of legal proceedings, or even those not formally accused.

What stands out about Trumps acts of forgiveness isnt so much the number but his methods. Many of the people given clemency by Trump were prominent and outspoken supporters of his, and he often bypassed the traditional process that started with pardon-seekers petitioning the Justice Department. The White House declined to comment.

The presidents clemency power is unilateral, but its not absolute. Offering a pardon for silence is not allowed. Thats like witness tampering, said Jeremy Paul, a professor at the Northeastern University School of Law.

For those speculating about whom Trump might pardon, heres a partial list of possibilities:

President Donald Trump's former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn arrives Dec. 18, 2018, at federal court in Washington.(Photo: Carolyn Kaster, AP, File)

Trump could put an end to his former national security advisers four-year legal saga by reaching in with a pardon.

Flynn twice pleaded guilty to lying to FBI agents examining his ties to Russia, then moved to withdraw his plea, after hiring a lawyer whos been an outspoken critic of the Mueller investigation. In May, the Justice Department moved to withdraw its case against Flynn.

U.S. District Court Judge Emmett Sullivan is now trying to determine whether the Justice Departments about-face was guided by corrupt motives. That review would end with a pardon.

Paul Manafort, center, arrives June 27, 2019, at court in New York.(Photo: Seth Wenig, AP, File)

Trump has expressed sympathy for his former campaign chairman, saying that his prosecution was unfair and that a pardon was not off the table.

Manafort, who spent his career working on behalf of pro-Kremlin oligarchs in Ukraine, never flipped on the president. Even when Manafort decided to cooperate with Mueller, following a conviction at trial for financial crimes, he kept lying.

Manafort was sentenced to seven-plus years. After the Covid pandemic emerged this year, he was allowed to serve it at home. Trump praised Manafort after his conviction for refusing to break under pressure and compared him with his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, a cooperator described by Trump as a rat.

Former campaign adviser for President Donald Trump, Roger Stone walks out of the federal courthouse following a hearing, Friday, Jan. 25, 2019, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.(Photo: Lynne Sladky, AP)

Trump commuted Stones sentence just as he was to report to prison to serve a 40-month term. The president could go a step further by erasing his friends criminal record.

Trumps relationship with the self-described political dirty-trickster goes back decades, to when both men were mentored by the notorious fixer-lawyer Roy Cohn.

Muellers report described Stone as a primary conduit of information between WikiLeaks, which published a trove of emails hacked from Hillary Clintons campaign chairman in 2016, and the Trump campaign. He obstructed Muellers investigation and was convicted of lying to Congress and tampering with witnesses.

Rudy Giuliani with Lev Parnas(Photo: AP)

Giuliani is under investigation by prosecutors in the Southern District of New York, which he once ran. No charges have been brought, but Trump could pre-emptively lift any cloud of uncertainty over the former New York mayor by pardoning him anyway.

Trump calls Giuliani his personal lawyer, but Giuliani is also so much more: his fixer, his unofficial foreign ambassador, his Fox News surrogate.

The SDNY investigation involves his business partnership with Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, who helped him dig up information about Trumps chief political rival, Joe Biden. A wire-fraud charge against Parnas and another associate alleges that they raised more than $1 million from investors under false pretenses. Giuliani has said he was paid $500,000 to promote their new company, Fraud Guarantee.

President Donald Trump's former chief strategist Steve Bannon leaves federal court after pleading not guilty to charges that he ripped off donors to an online fundraising scheme to build a southern border wall.(Photo: Craig Ruttle / AP)

Similar to Manafort, Bannon was a Trump campaign CEO in 2016. Along with three others, Bannon was charged in August with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering in connection with an effort to get private sector funding to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border a signature Trump campaign promise.

Although Bannon was pushed out as chief White House strategist in 2017, he has worked to support Trumps re-election effort, tipping off a New York Post reporter in September to the existence of a cache of suspicious emails from the laptop of Hunter Biden, a son of the Democratic presidential nominee.

This is a court artist sketch of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange in the dock at Belmarsh Magistrates' Court for his extradition hearing, in London, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020.(Photo: Elizabeth Cook, AP)

Assange was never in Trumps inner circle, but he has information about his interactions with the 2016 Trump campaign concerning emails infamously stolen from top Democrats.

The controversial founder of WikiLeaks is fighting extradition in the U.K., hoping to avoid criminal charges of computer intrusion filed against him in Virginia.

A lawyer for Assange told a U.K. court in September that two Trump associates had offered Assange a deal in which a U.S. extradition order would be lifted if he revealed who gave WikiLeaks the Democrats emails.

According to the Mueller report, WikiLeaks played a crucial role in the Russian governments attempt to influence the 2016 election.

Elliott Broidy(Photo: David Karp, AP, File)

The former top Trump fundraisers guilty plea for failing to register as an agent of a foreign entity was related to a Malaysian embezzlement scheme that didnt involve Trump, so its not clear whether the president would feel any duty of loyalty to Broidy.

Trump could also issue preemptive pardons in an effort to protect members of his family and executives of his real estate company from future prosecution at the federal level. The Supreme Court settled any question about the legality of such pardons in the 19th century.

State prosecutors in New York are already looking at whether the Trump Organization misrepresented the value of its assets in securing bank loans and making insurance claims. Although the president has no control over the state actions, he could pardon his children including Donald Jr. and Eric, who run the company and Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, which could blunt any possible federal investigations in the future.

Separately, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, Trumps eldest daughter and son in law, have been criticized for using their White House positions to bolster their private business interests. As senior advisers to the president, they would also have been privy to some of the most sensitive decisions that Trump made in the White House. A preemptive pardon would insulate them from prosecution.

A pardon to any member of his family would not be at risk to a legal challenge, said Paul, the Northeastern University law professor.

President Donald Trump punches his fists back and forth after his campaign rally speech in Lansing on Tuesday.(Photo: Todd McInturf, The Detroit News)

And then theres the idea of a self-pardon. Trump has said he has the absolute right to pardon myself, but it would be an unprecedented step, according to Stuart Green of Rutgers Law School.

Theres a certain incoherence in the idea of self pardon, he said. Even though its not in the language of the Constitution, it defies our understanding of the rule of law.

Trump has numerous reasons to consider testing the limits of his clemency power.

After he leaves office in 2021 or 2025, the president could face scrutiny over a variety of issues, including claims that he used his office to funnel business to his hotel and resort properties. Theres also the campaign finance violation that ensnared Cohen, involving hush payments to an adult-film actress. Cohen has said that Trump directed those payments. Court filings in that case implicated Trump but didnt identify him by name.

Also, the Mueller report describes several episodes in which Trump tried to obstruct justice. Attorney General William Barr determined that Trump didnt break the law, but a future attorney general might take a second look.

Finally, the New York Times recent reporting on the presidents income tax returns revealing that he paid only $750 in income taxes in 2016 and 2017 questioned the tax treatment of some of his deductions over the years and could set off a potential tax-evasion investigation.

A self-pardon would almost surely prompt legal challenges and force the Supreme Court to determine its constitutionality. It also may not be necessary, said Weissmann, the former Mueller prosecutor and author of Where Law Ends: Inside the Mueller Investigation.

If he wins the election, Weissmann said, he need not fear federal prosecution as he has Barr at the helm of the Justice Department.

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Trump expected to unleash clemency power after election, win or lose - The Detroit News