FAC

Judge tosses out privacy claim against Michael Moore over ‘Sicko’ segment

A federal magistrate judge in Tacoma has thrown out key claims in a lawsuit filed against controversial filmmaker Michael Moore and his Academy Award-nominated documentary “Sicko,” the first use of a state law that bars lawsuits targeting conduct associated with free speech and the First Amendment. Seattle Times September 6, 2010 By Mike Carter Related A federal magistrate judge in Tacoma has thrown out key claims in a lawsuit filed against controversial filmmaker Michael Moore

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Newspaper gets records detailing remote Idaho shootout

Public records recently obtained by the Post Register detail a strange incident in which four Idaho State Police officers were left scrambling for safety when they were shot at by an unknown assailant at a remote mining claim. September 6, 2010 By The Associated Press IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — No one was hit by the gunfire and no arrests were made, but the Jan. 14, 2009, incident was shrouded in secrecy until the Idaho Falls

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Federal judge won’t dismiss KKK suit

A federal judge in St. Louis has rejected a state request to dismiss the lawsuit filed by a Ku Klux Klan group. September 5, 2010 By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS —Frank Ancona, imperial wizard of the Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, is seeking to rent a pavilion at the Fort Davidson Historic Site in southeast Missouri. The group filed a lawsuit as it sought to use the site for an April

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Court revives Chicago’s disorderly conduct law

Two peace activists have lost a court battle to declare that Chicago’s disorderly-conduct ordinance is unconstitutional. The Chicago Sun-Times September 3, 2010 By Frank Main Don Goldhamer and Robin Schirmer were arrested in 2006 at the Taste of Chicago after refusing a police order to move into a designated protest zone. They were opposing military recruitment — handing out leaflets and speaking to people near a recruiting booth — when they were arrested for disorderly

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California Assembly gets tough on taping during sessions

Is it a matter of “decorum,” or does the California Assembly have other reasons for enforcing a rule that prohibits reporters from using cameras and microphones without permission from the Speaker’s office? Sept. 3, 2010 By Jim Sanders The Sacramento Bee The California Assembly has begun enforcing a dusty rule in which the media can watch lawmakers debate public policy on one condition: Turn off the video cameras and microphones. Sergeants-at-arms, in a broad push

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