First Amendment News

County withdraws search warrant used to search house of Gizmodo editor

In a dispute over the iPhone prototype, law enforcement has withdrawn a search warrant and Gizmodo has agreed to provide specific information over how they obtained the prototype without Apple’s permission. -db County withdraws search warrant used to search house of Gizmodo editor http://www.rcfp.org/newsitems/index.php?i=11495 Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press July 22, 2010 By Cristina Abello California county officials last week withdrew a search warrant that was executed months earlier when government-authorized agents from

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Free speech: Parodies of Hitler film clip run into copyright restrictions

The movie studio that made a 2004 film showing Adolf Hitler in a rage over the impending defeat of Nazi Germany is struggling to defend its copyright as parodies based on Hitler’s rage sprout on the Internet. db Free speech: Parodies of Hitler film clip run into copyright restrictions San Francisco Chronicle July 23, 2010 By Benny Evangelista In a dramatic scene from the 2004 European film “Downfall,” Adolf Hitler flies into a tirade as

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Tulare supervisors admit open meeting law violations in holding lunch meetings

In a court filing, the Tulare County supervisors admitted violating California’s open meetings law in holding regular lunch meetings they had earlier claimed were only to bolster their esprit de corp. Tulare supervisors admit open meeting law violations in  holding lunch meetings http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/article/20100721/NEWS01/7210323/Court-filing-Tulare-County-Board-of-Supervisors-admitted-violations-to-open-meetings-law Visalia Times-Deta July 21, 2010 By Valerie Gibbons A new court filing argues that Tulare County supervisors admitted violating state open-meeting laws when they certified that lunch meetings represented a business expense.

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Southern California: Azusa quarry challenged on open meetings issue

Pasadena Star-News Duarte intends to make courts decide the fate of Azusa Rock Quarry By Daniel Tedford, Staff Writer Posted: 07/23/2010 07:15:06 PM PDT DUARTE – The city is going to take legal action against Azusa over a recently approved plan to mine part of the Azusa Rock Quarry near Duarte’s border. City Council members at their meeting Thursday voted unanimously to sue Azusa over a plan by Vulcan Materials Co. to mine 80 acres

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Amador supervisors accused of violating open meeting law

The District Attorney of Amador County is investigating allegations that the county supervisors cancelled a meeting then held the meeting anyway, thus violating California’s open meeting law. db Ledger Dispatch July 23, 2010 By Matthew Hedger The Amador County Board of Supervisors may have violated provisions of the Brown Act by holding a meeting after mistakenly announcing, both publicly and on the county’s own website,that it had been canceled. A timeline of events shows a public hearing to hear an appeal of a planning department decision by a local resident was scheduled for June 26. That hearing took place, and was continued to July 6. A mix-up in the supervisors’ office apparently resulted in a mis-communication about that meeting, although all of the supervisors, the person asking for the appeal to be overturned, Tom Hunt, and a neighbor who opposed the action, Barbara Cobarruviaz, all traveled to the project site on Fiddletown Road. But neither the press, nor the public, had an opportunity to attend the meeting, because it had previously been listed as canceled and had never been posted nor noticed. District Attorney Todd Riebe confirmed to the Ledger Dispatch that a complaint had been filed with his office. “We’ve received a complaint which we are investigating,” said Riebe, who could not confirm a complaint to the state attorney general’s office in Sacramento had also been made. Phone calls to that office were not immediately returned. “When an allegation involves the board, there’s some issues there,” Riebe said. “I’m going to take a look at it, and if she (the complainant) wants a second opinion, she can have at it.” Riebe said if action had been taken at the meeting, it would be an issue, but pointed out no action had been taken. “I’m looking at it. It’s under investigation. She’s going to be interviewed, and she can state what her objections are,” Riebe said. In the hours leading up to the 2 p.m. meeting on July 6, office staff discovered the error and called County Counsel Martha Shaver for advice. Shaver indicated it would be OK for the “field trip” to continue as long as no formal action was taken. “She told them they could go out and visit the site, they just couldn’t take any action. They would have to continue it to the next meeting,” explained Deputy Board Clerk Sheri Robinson. “They decided to not take any action that day and continue the matter to the following meeting, because it wasn’t properly noticed.” Staff re-agendized the hearing for July 13, where the appeal was granted, overturning the planning department decision on a 4-1 vote, with Board Chairman Brian Oneto casting the lone no vote. In an interview with the Ledger Dispatch, Oneto explained what happened. “At an earlier meeting on June 22, we’d looked at that Tom Hunt appeal, and (District 4 Supervisor) Louis Boitano said, ‘Why don’t we have a field trip out there and take a look at it,’” Oneto said. “So we set the date for the field trip for July 6, a special meeting to address it. The lady who I think is unhappy, the decision did not go in her favor. The decision was 4-1. I voted no, not to overturn it. “But we showed up out there and we said, ‘There’s been a posting problem, so we cannot make a decision on site,’ which was the original intent,” he added. Oneto said the board wanted to balance the needs of the opposing parties, and tried to do the right thing. “We came in the morning of July 6 and said, ‘oh my gosh, this thing wasn’t posted out front,’ the intent was to post it at the property also, not that you legally have to, but it wasn’t posted there

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