First Amendment News

Appeal judges hear arguments in CFAC's suit for release of county's digital mapping database

CFAC is awaiting a decision in an appeal of its trial court victory against Santa Clara County for release of the county’s digital “basemap” of real estate parcels, which can be used in various digital mapping applications. Santa Clara County, which has licensed the basemap for tens-of-thousands of dollars, now claims release of the files threatens national security and is barred by federal Homeland Security regulations. Appeals Court judges quizzed lawyers for both sides in

Read More »

CFAC joins appeal to permit webcasting of file-sharing case in federal court

CFAC has joined a legal brief urging the federal Court of Appeals in Boston to allow the webcasting of court hearings in a music file-sharing lawsuit filed by the recording industry. Although TV cameras are permitted in California state trial courts on a case-by-case basis, few federal courts have allowed cameras since an experiment in the 1990s—and the discretion of individual federal district court judges to permit cameras is unclear. The brief, filed yesterday, was

Read More »

Lawyers' group fails in attempt to intervene in CFAC suit over State Bar affirmative action records

CFAC’s lawsuit against the State Bar for bar exam records relevant to research on law schools’ affirmative action policies has moved forward. CFAC successfully turned back an attempt by a group of lawyers, who claim to be interested in the confidentiality of the Bar data, to intervene in the case to block disclosure. At a hearing on Wednesday in San Francisco Superior Court, the lawyers’ group’s motion to intervene was denied, although the group is

Read More »

FAA delays release of Marine jet crash tape

Deferring to the military, the Federal Aviation Administration will not release the recording for the crash of a Marine Corps airplane that killed four until Feb. 27 when the Corp finishes their investigation. News agencies are seeking the recording to determine why the crippled jet flew over a densely populated area rather than to an alternate landing site over the ocean. -DB

Read More »

Obama asked to release documents Bush wanted kept secret

The ACLU and CREW have asked the Obama administration for the release of documents including Office of Legal Counsel opinions and White House e-mail. Groups sued the Bush administration to gain access to these and other documents. -DB Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press Jan. 28, 2009 By Hannah Bergman WASHINGTON, D.C. – At least two groups are asking the Obama administration to reconsider its stance on pending Freedom of Information Act lawsuits. The

Read More »