Your Right to Record at the Border

A special message on landmark legal settlement affirming your right to film federal officials in public areas at land ports of entry  The right to record law enforcement activity is entrenched in First Amendment law, but it took an eight-year lawsuit to uphold it at U.S. land ports of entry, which are often critical community hubs. For example, the San Ysidro Port of Entry between San Diego and Tijuana is the busiest land port of

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Portland police pay reporters for injuries suffered during protest

Portland is on the hook for a $55,000 payout to two journalists who claim they suffered injuries at the hands of police during Black Lives Matter protests in 2020. Both reporters were contributors to Village Portland and KBOO Community Radio and were arrested while live-streaming a protest. One of the reporters, Cory Elia, said the police tactics violated the First Amendment and mounted “an attack on the public’s right to be informed of the injustices

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Free speech: Conservatives challenge Title IX revisions

The Biden administration’s proposed update of Title IX makes it easier for those subjected to sexual harassment to report the incidents and dropped in-person hearings and cross-examinations. Conservatives are concerned that the new procedures would damage due process and limit free speech rights. (Inside Higher Ed, June 24, 2022, by Meghan Brink) Cherise Trump in The American Conservative, July 5, 2022, says that the proposals would result in enabling universities to restrict and compel student

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Decision reversing Roe v. Wade imperils free speech

In the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling Dobbs v. Jackson, states have not only passed laws establishing criminal penalties for abortion seekers but are also proposing laws to make sharing information about abortion a crime. These laws can chill the speech of doctors and patients and also put journalists covering abortion-rights movement in jeopardy. (Daily Beast, July 17, 2022, by Summer Lopez And Nadine Farid Johnson) It’s also expected that states will try

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Federal court nixes criminalizing speech that encourages illegal immigration

The 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that a federal law criminalizing encouragement of undocumented immigrants to enter or remain in the U.S. was an unconstitutional violation of free speech. (Reuters, July 13, 2022, by Daniel Wiessner) The case involved prosecution of two men who planned to employ noncitizens in construction. Federal appeals courts are split over the issue, the 4th Circuit upheld the law in 2011 and the 9th Circuit struck it down

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