firstamendment

Bush e-mails: Federal court rules White House office records secret

A U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the White House Office of Administration is not subject to the Freedom of Information Act and does not have to release records pertaining to the disappearance of millions of Bush administration e-mails. -DB CBS News May 19, 2009 By Stephanie Condon A White House office will not have to publicly release its records relating to the disappearance of millions of e-mails from the Bush administration, a federal appeals

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ACLU sues Tennessee schools for censoring gay educational sites

The American Civil Liberties Union has brought a suit in federal court that asserts that two Tennessee school districts are unconstitutionally blocking students from accessing web sites that provide information about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues. -DB American Civil Liberties Union May 19, 2009 Press Release NASHVILLE, TN – The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Tennessee sued two Tennessee school districts in federal court May 19, charging the schools are unconstitutionally

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First Amendment frontier: Protest and parody sites need to take precautions

A new Electronic Frontier Foundation white paper makes suggestions to site developers for protecting themselves against being shut down by the subjects of their criticism and parody. -DB Electronic Frontier Foundation May 15, 2009 By Corynne McSherry Here’s a story we hear a lot at EFF: You think BadCo, Inc. is a bad actor and you’ve developed a really cool site to tell the world why. Maybe just by griping about them or maybe through

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California student journalist tries to invoke shield law

San Francisco police want a student journalist who took photos at a crime scene to surrender them to help identify the person who committed the murder. For a number of reasons, the student has refused to hand over the photos, instead invoking the state shield law. -DB San Francisco Chronicle May 19, 2009 By Jaxon Van Derbeken A potentially key witness to a killing last month in San Francisco – a college journalism student –

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ACLU says Obama administration may lift gag order on national security letters

FBI letters sent to internet service providers to obtain information about clients and subscribers came with gag orders which precluded judicial review. After the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the ruling that the gag orders were unconstitutional, the Obama administration failed to meet the time limits for an appeal. The appeals court ordered the FBI to develop procedures for justifying any gag order it requests for national security letters. -DB American

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