donal brown

Trump prefers military force in dealing with protests

Pentagon officials were upset by President Donald Trump’s announcement that he is thinking of using the military to quell nationwide protests of the George Floyd killing by police in Minneapolis. Trump wants to use an 1807 law that allows the president to use the military to restore order in a civil disturbance. Other laws forbid the military from enforcing laws within the U.S. Even leaders of the national guard, now deployed in large numbers, warn

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Attacks on journalists covering protests at dangerous levels

Police and protesters are attacking journalists and media crews covering demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd. There have been reports of attacks and arrests of journalists in Louisville, Kentucky, Las Vegas, Atlanta and Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump has also lashed out at the media tweeting a message that the media was “doing everything within their power to foment hatred and anarchy.” (USA Today, June 1 2020, by Lorenzo Reyes) The U.S. Press Freedom

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California Supreme Court: No big fees for editing police videos

The California Supreme Court ruled unanimously the police departments cannot ask for fees for redacting body camera videos before releasing them. Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuellar wrote that the fees should not be charged for routine tasks, fees that could obstruct the public’s right to see the videos. (Sacramento Bee, May 28, 2020, by Rosalio Ahumada) The National Lawyer’s Guild brought the lawsuit after the City of Hayward wanted to charge them $3,200 to redact 232 minutes

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Researches sue California prison system for data on race and ethnicity

Researchers from Stanford and Oregon are asking the California Department of Corrections to stop withholding records on race and ethnicity. The researchers hope to use the data to devise an AI system to flag improperly influenced parole denials . (San Francisco Chronicle, May 22, 2020, by Megan Cassidy) The EFF filed a lawsuit for the researchers. The researchers made their first request for the records in September of 2018, but the corrections department cited exemptions

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Federal appeals court finds no tech conspiracy against conservatives

The D.C. appeals court upheld a lower court decision dismissing a claim by conservatives that the tech companies, Twitter, Facebook, Apple and Google, conspired to stifle conservative views online. Freedom Watch and a YouTube personality Laura Loomer claimed the companies worked together to discriminate against conservative voices in violation of the First Amendment. (Bloomberg News, May 27, 2020, by Erik Larson) In a 3-0 decision, the court ruled that as private companies they could not

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