First Amendment News

Sixth grader’s report on Harvey Milk disallowed in Southern California classroom

An elementary school principal banned a report on gay leader Harvey Milk from the classroom, saying it was “sensitive” and came under the school’s controversial issue policy. The ACLU says the act was one of blatant censorship and threatened a lawsuit. -DB San Diego 6 (XETV-TV) May 20, 2009 By Elex Michaelson “I’m Harvey Milk, and I’m here to recruit you!” That line was Harvey Milk’s signature at the beginning of every speech. When 6th

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Tracking stimulus money not a slam dunk

Although the Obama administration has established a web site, Recovery.gov, to help the public track government stimulus money, it may never deliver the transparency originally promised. The administration is now looking for ways to require detailed reports from those receiving federal contracts. -DB The Washington Post May 21, 2009 By Alec MacGillis Shortly after the economic stimulus bill was signed, Vice President Biden was talking up the administration’s Web site to track the spending, Recovery.gov,

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Obama administration to study reforms for classification procedures

President Barack Obama announced that the government is reviewing current policies of agencies responsible for classifying documents. Long overdue, the review is expected to eliminate obsolete rules and put the skids on overclassification. -DB Secrecy News Federation of American Scientists May 21, 2009 “We are launching a review of current policies by all of those agencies responsible for the classification of documents to determine where reforms are possible,” announced President Obama in a speech at

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Palin hacking case: Accused says e-mails were public record

A college student accused of illegally hacking into Alaska Governor Sarah Palin’s e-mails says a court had declared the e-mails part of the public record. Among a number of issues, the federal case addresses whether e-mail is property and thereby subject to privacy protection. -DB Wired May 20, 2009 By Kim Zetter A surprise legal maneuver by the defense in the Sarah Palin hacking case could undermine key charges carrying the stiffest potential penalties. A

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California Supreme court allows lawsuit over ‘misleading’ tobacco ads to proceed

In a suit that claimed tobacco companies ran fraudulent ads, by a 4-3 vote the California Supreme Court rejected the argument that every plaintiff in the class-action suit – millions of people – had to show they had seen an allegedly deceptive ad and relied on it to make a purchase. -DB San Francisco Chronicle May 19, 2009 By Bob Egelko Consumers have the right to sue as a group over advertising they believe misled

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