First Amendment News

San Joaquin Delta trustees vote down penalty for serial meeting infraction

The San Joaquin Delta College Board of Trustees decided a grand jury’s finding that three of its members held a serial meeting to dismiss the former college district president was not detailed enough to warrant censuring the three. -db RecordNet.com September 9, 2010 By Alex Breitler STOCKTON – The San Joaquin Delta College Board of Trustees declined to censure three of its members for an alleged serial meeting to oust former President Raul Rodriguez. In

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ACLU challenges searches of laptops at borders

Civil rights lawyers sued the government yesterday to stop authorities from snooping in the laptops, cell phones and cameras of international travelers without probable cause. September 8, 2010 By The Associated Press NEW YORK — The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn against the Department of Homeland Security as well as U.S. customs and immigration authorities. The lawsuit says more than 6,500 people have had their electronic devices searched as they crossed

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Federal judge tosses Wash. limit on late campaign spending

State officials are mulling their next steps after a federal judge overturned a state law limiting campaign contributions in the final weeks of ballot-measure campaigns. September 8, 2010 By The Associated Press OLYMPIA, Wash. — If the ruling stands, money could flow even more freely to this year’s crop of voter initiatives. Six such measures are on the ballot — the second-most in state history — and state records show the campaigns have raised a

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Copyright ‘troll’ seeks $150,000 from Republican candidate

A copyright enforcement service has filed a lawsuit seeking $150,000 from Nevada Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle for posting two newspaper articles without authorization. The Register September 8, 2010 By Dan Goodin A copyright enforcement service has filed a lawsuit seeking $150,000 from Nevada Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle for posting two newspaper articles without authorization. The complaint, which was filed in US District Court in Las Vegas, is at least the 117th lawsuit to

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Florida pastor has legal right to burn Qurans

Florida pastor Terry Jones will undoubtedly offend and infuriate many people around the world if he follows through on a plan to burn Muslim Qurans at his church this weekend. The Associated Press September 8, 2010 By Curt Anderson  MIAMI —The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution will protect him, in the same way it allows the Ku Klux Klan to burn crosses and for protesters to torch the American flag. The U.S. Supreme Court

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