Archive for the ‘First Amendment’ Category

Gun Advocates Rally for 2nd Amendment Rights; LT Governor Says His 1st Amendment Rights Ignored – ABC27

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) It is a yearly tradition at the State Capitol. Gun-toting Second Amendment supporters rally for their right to carry firearms. However, just above them on the Capitol balcony, the First Amendment right of the lieutenant governor was all but ignored.

They brought their flags. They brought their firearms.

Now is the time for the states to rise up and defend the Second Amendment, Rep. Stephanie Borowicz (R), Clinton/Centre Counties, said. They continuously try to shove down our throats gun control.

They brought their feistiness.

30 years ago there were more pro-gun democrats in this building than there were republicans. The whole party has swung into the nutball realm, Kim Stolfer, of Firearms Owners Against Crime, said.

But, the states second ranking democrat is also armed with flags and feistiness.

Theyre making their statement today and Im making mine and I just wish it didnt have to be this way, Lt. Governor John Fetterman (D), said.

Lt. Governor Fetterman is flying the gay pride flag on his balcony.

All were advocating for is equal protection under the law regardless of who you choose to love or how you identify, Fetterman said.

Gays, who can be fired for their sexual orientation, do not receive equal protection in PA. Neither do Fettermans flags. Republican lawmakers inserted language into last ears budget that no flags can fly from that balcony. The GOP points out that Governor Wolf did sign off on it.

Thats specious reasoning they know, well they attach it as a rider to the budget and not gonna jam up the entire budget over something like this, Fetterman said.

Fettermans flag was up at 9 a.m. By 1 p.m. a state employee has come to take it away. Fetterman says hes lost more than ten flags in the same manner. But where do they go?

Theyre confiscated and I dont know the enchanted land of missing flags, I dont know, I dont know where, Fetterman said.

Perhaps there is irony that heavily armed ralliers worry about guns being taken away, which has never happened, while right above them flags are seized whenever theyre flown.

They have the constitutionally protected rights and Im saying great, give that to members of this community, too, Fetterman said.

A bill to let firearm owners carry concealed weapons without a license is expected to move this week.

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Gun Advocates Rally for 2nd Amendment Rights; LT Governor Says His 1st Amendment Rights Ignored - ABC27

U.S. Supreme Court Will Have Another Opportunity to Recognize First Amendment Rights of Public Employees – Buckeye Institute

Jun 07, 2021

Columbus, OH Robert Alt, president and chief executive officer of The Buckeye Institute, issued the following statement after the Supreme Court of the United States announced it had denied cert in Thompson v. Marietta Education Association, which called for an immediate end to laws that force public-sector employees to accept a unions exclusive representation.

Unfortunately, the Supreme Court passed on the opportunity to hear Mrs. Thompsons case and resolve the conflict noted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which stated that Ohios take-it-or-leave-it system of exclusive representation directly conflicts with the principles announced in Janus v. AFSCME. Despite todays decision, the high court will have other opportunities to rule on the important question of forced union exclusive representation and recognize the First Amendment Rights of public employees across the country.

The Buckeye Institute was the first organization to file lawsuits calling on courts to end compelled exclusive representation following the Janus decision, and was representing Mrs. Thompson. The Buckeye Institute is also representing Professor Kathy Uradnik of Minnesota whose case is pending in the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit.

A public high school Spanish teacher in Marietta, Ohio, Mrs. Thompsons case was initially filed on June 27, 2018, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, with its motion for preliminary injunction filed on July 23, 2018. The case was appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on February 18, 2020. The Buckeye Institute filed its petition for writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court on January 22, 2021. Cert was denied on June 7, 2021.

Mrs. Thompsons Piece in The Columbus Dispatch: Marietta teacher tells her union No ms!

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Link:
U.S. Supreme Court Will Have Another Opportunity to Recognize First Amendment Rights of Public Employees - Buckeye Institute

Blocked Twitter Users’ Attys Seek Fees After Win Over Trump – Law360

Law360 (June 9, 2021, 6:55 PM EDT) -- Lawyers from Jenner & Block LLP and Columbia University on Wednesday sought $918,000 in fees for successfully challenging the constitutionality of then-President Donald Trump's move to block critics from his personal Twitter account, saying the government's defense of the conduct was unreasonable.

In a 2018 ruling upheld by the Second Circuit and rejected for U.S. Supreme Court review as moot given Trump's 2020 election loss, U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald ruled that Trump's conduct amounted to unconstitutional "viewpoint discrimination" under the First Amendment.

Now the lawyers for the plaintiffs Columbia University's Knight First Amendment Institute and seven Twitter users...

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Blocked Twitter Users' Attys Seek Fees After Win Over Trump - Law360

Biden Drops Trump’s Ban on TikTok And WeChat But Will Continue The Scrutiny – NPR

President Biden on Wednesday rescinded former President Donald Trump's actions targeting Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat. Kiichiro Sato/AP hide caption

President Biden on Wednesday rescinded former President Donald Trump's actions targeting Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat.

Former President Donald Trump's TikTok and WeChat bans were officially dropped on Wednesday, but scrutiny of the China-owned apps will continue under the Biden administration.

To replace the Trump-era actions, President Biden signed new orders calling for the Commerce Department to launch national security reviews of apps with links to foreign adversaries, including China.

The move represents a reset in relations between Washington and TikTok, the hit video-sharing app owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, and WeChat, the popular messaging app run by Shenzhen-based Tencent. But the apps are "not out of the woods yet," said James Lewis, who heads technology policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and has been in discussions with White House officials in both administrations about the future of the apps.

"I wouldn't be surprised if you saw a ban reinstated but on more rational grounds," Lewis said. "If I was TikTok, I would be thinking about what do I do to ward off another ban."

Biden's executive order mandates accountability measures that TikTok does not currently have, including "reliable third-party auditing" of the app for possible security risk.

Because of the ties to China, U.S. officials remain concerned about how the apps treat Americans' data, Lewis said.

"You can be as pure as the driven snow, but any time Xi Jinping wants to lean on you, he can do it, and you have no appeal," he said.

Under Biden's new order, the Commerce Department will launch an "evidence-based" evaluation of apps with Chinese connections that may pose a security risk and "take action, as appropriate" based on those reviews.

The American Civil Liberties Union applauded Biden's move but warned against any future punitive measures against the apps that could violate the rights of users.

"President Biden is right to revoke these Trump administration executive orders, which blatantly violated the First Amendment rights of TikTok and WeChat users in the United States," said Ashley Gorski, a senior staff attorney at the ACLU. "The Commerce Department's review of these and other apps must not take us down the same misguided path, by serving as a smokescreen for future bans or other unlawful actions."

The measured tone from the Biden administration is a stark contrast with Trump, who tried to outright ban the apps last year. His aggressive push against TikTok and WeChat confused and panicked people in the U.S. who use the apps. While millions turned to TikTok for distraction and fun during the pandemic, many American businesses rely on WeChat for sales, marketing and other transactions with customers in China. Trump's actions also led to lawsuits, leading to federal courts' pausing enforcement of his directives.

To appease Trump, TikTok also explored potential sales to American firms, including Microsoft, Oracle and Walmart. No agreement was ever hammered out, however.

The owners of TikTok, the most popular app in the world, were reluctant to sell off the first China-based app that has reached global success. State media in China called Trump's tactics against TikTok "nothing short of broad daylight robbery."

Biden's move to drop Trump's executive actions had been expected since at least February when the administration put the Trump-era orders on ice.

Months before Trump tried to shut down TikTok, the company had been in talks with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, an interagency panel that reviews companies that have overseas ownership.

ByteDance, TikTok's corporate owner, is still involved in those negotiations over a deal to ensure Americans' data is not in jeopardy of being accessed by Chinese authorities.

TikTok has long maintained there is a firewall between it and its corporate owner in China. TikTok executives say no data on Americans users is housed on Chinese servers; that data can only be obtained with the permission of TikTok's U.S.-based security team.

Under TikTok's terms of service, user data can be shared with ByteDance. Yet TikTok says Chinese government officials have never asked it for information on U.S. users. If Beijing did ever make such a request, TikTok's lawyers say it would be denied.

The amount of data TikTok mines from its mobile phone users is on par with what other apps collect, including ones owned by Facebook and Google.

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Biden Drops Trump's Ban on TikTok And WeChat But Will Continue The Scrutiny - NPR

Mystery surrounds Justice’s pledge on journalist records | TheHill – The Hill

The Justice Departments pledge that it will no longer secretly obtain the records of journalists has left a number of unanswered questions about the departments handling of leak investigations initiated under the Trump-era.

It's not clear what high ranking Biden officials knew and when as DOJproceeded with cases involving reporters from three different media outlets orwhy the department continued to push for gag orders in two cases even after PresidentBiden said late last month that seizure of journalist records was "simply simply wrong."

Press advocates were happy to see Justice reverse itselfSaturdayand say it would no longer target journalists, but they also point out theyd like to know more.

Its a welcome policy change, but part of the problem is what we just don't know. We have significant unanswered questions with regard to what happened in all three cases, said Gabe Rottman, director of the Technology and Press Freedom Project with The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Justice notified reporters itreceived phone records from CNN, The Washington Post and The New York Times, while email logs were obtained for CNN.

The investigations were all tied to stories each outlet had written in the early days of the Trump administration. That includes an investigation into whether former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyNYT publisher: DOJ phone records seizure a 'dangerous incursion' on press freedom Trump DOJ seized phone records of New York Times reporters The FBI should turn off the FARA faucet MORE shared details with reporters about a document that influenced his decision to close an investigation into Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonAuthor James Patterson: 'Fiction still works' Florida Rep. Val Demings officially enters Senate race against Rubio McAuliffe wins Democratic primary in Virginia governor's race MORE.

During the time period in which records were sought, The Post also published a story about former Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDemocrats claim vindication, GOP cries witch hunt as McGahn finally testifies CNN reporter's phone and email records secretly obtained by Trump administration: report Biden looks to expand legal assistance for minorities, low-income Americans MOREs contact with Russian officials and CNN reported on U.S. military proposals on North Korea.

This saga is just another reminder that much of what occurs in government is due to institutional practice, and that a mere shift in political power doesnt immediately halt all ongoing executive branch actions, Bradley Moss, a national security lawyer, told The Hill by email, noting that former President TrumpDonald TrumpFormer House Republican to challenge DeWine for Ohio gubernatorial nomination GOP senators press Justice Department to compare protest arrests to Capitol riot Overnight Defense: Austin directs classified initiatives to counter China | Biden emphasizes alliances in speech to troops | Lockdown lifted at Texas base after reported shooting MORE expanded leak investigation practices used under the Bush and Obama administrations.

The current leadership under [Attorney General Merrick] Garland is trying to sort out particular actions they believe warrant continuing for institutional and legal reasons, as opposed to those such as the surveillance of reporters communications they no longer view as necessary or appropriate.

The seizures were a deviation from a Justice Department policy that typically requires the department to notify reporters as soon as their records are sought.

But the Trump administration took advantage of a provision that allows the attorney general to delay notification if there is a threat to the integrity of the investigation or a risk of grave harm to national security or death.

In such cases the Justice Department is required to disclose that the records were obtained within 45 days, though the attorney general can extend that period for another 45 days.

The timeframe largely left the task to fall on the Biden administration, though its not clear if the Biden Justice Department met the 90-day requirement for notifying reporters.

Justice did not respond to a request from The Hill on this matter.

Its also not completely clear how high up the chain decisions were made or why Justice continued to push for secrecy after Bidens May 21 comments.

The department continued to seek gag orders on lawyers at both The New York Times and CNN to prevent attorneys from sharing the legal matter with new executives or reporters.

According to reporting from The New York Times, the Bidens Justice Department fought into the first days of March to keep Google, The Times email provider, from notifying the papers lawyer about the attempts to seize reporter emails.

Even after Garland was sworn in on March 11, Justice sought to keep The Times lawyer from sharing the details of the case beyond a few top executives a position it did not reverse until June 2.

The White House said it was not aware of the gag order until the agency relented in court.

As appropriate given the independence of the Justice Department in specific criminal cases, no one at the White House was aware of the gag order until Friday night, White House Press Secretary Jen PsakiJen PsakiNew report reignites push for wealth tax Democrats blast Biden climate adviser over infrastructure remarks Manchin says Biden has not pressured him to support elections, spending bills MORE said in a statement.

But even after the Justice statement Saturday, the agency still hadnt resolved a similar gag order with CNNs lawyer, which wasnt lifted by a judge until Wednesday.

Justice is facing calls to more fully explain what happened.

We need to know precisely who authored what, when the records were sought, when they were received, why the decision to delay notification was made we just need a full accounting of precisely what happened in all three of these cases, Rottman said.

And that full accounting is a prerequisite for determining whether additional policy reforms are warranted to make sure it doesn't happen again.

Justice has said it has no pending compulsory requests from reporters in leak investigations.

Going forward, consistent with the presidents direction, this Department of Justice in a change to its longstanding practice will not seek compulsory legal process in leak investigations to obtain source information from members of the news media doing their jobs. The Department strongly values a free press, protecting First Amendment values, and is committed to taking all appropriate steps to ensure the independence of journalists, DOJ spokesman Anthony Coley said Saturday.

But some are concerned the new policy may not be protective enough.

The new policy only applies in leak investigations and only to members of the news media and only when they are doing their jobs so it's not clear who the DOJ would count as members of the news media or what is means when it says theyre doing their jobs, so we need more information on what the policy actually is, said Anna Diakun, a staff attorney with the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University.

Garland said at a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing Wednesday that he would issue a memo soon to solidify the media policy changes.

The president has made clear his view about the First Amendment and it coincides with mine, he said. Going forward, we have adopted a policy which is the most protective of journalists' ability to do their jobs in history.

But its not an issue likely to go away. At the same hearing Wednesday, Sen. Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsPress: Joe Manchin ain't no profile in courage Senate passes bill to provide payments to 'Havana syndrome' victims On The Money: White House sees paths forward on infrastructure despite stalled talks | Biden battles Dem divides | FBI seizes bitcoin ransom paid by Colonial Pipeline MORE (R-Maine) asked if Justice would be investigating a breach, pointing to a ProPublica article analyzing the taxes paid by some of the wealthiest Americans after obtaining their confidential records.

Garland said only that he was sure that that means it will be referred to the Justice Department.

Media advocates also want Justice to do more to ensure the policy change will be lasting.

This is a reminder that DOJs protections for the news media are subject to change at the whim of an administration. There's nothing to stop President BidenJoe BidenWhite House announces major boost to global vaccine supply U.S. in talks to buy Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine to send abroad: report Pentagon to consider authorizing airstrikes in Afghanistan if country falls into crisis: report MORE from walking this commitment back in the future or a later administration from reversing this policy altogether. And without this certainty reporters and their sources just can't be sure whether their communications will be protected and that has a significant chilling effect, Diakun added.

Justices use of the 1917 Espionage Act to seek reporter records has dramatically ticked up over the last 20 years, with the Bush and Obama administrations also relying on the law to go after leakers.

The latest episodes have renewed calls for a federal shield law, modeled after numerous state laws that protects the rights of reporters to refuse to testify about sources of information obtained during the newsgathering process.

Jake Laperruque, senior counsel for The Constitution Project at the Project on Government Oversight, said the real test will be whether the department pushes for legislative changes.

If were going to stop a [seizure] policy that happens again and again we need a law to stop it, he said, adding that the record of the last 20 years indicates the tendency is to do the opposite.

Its not going to be enough to be responsible in the moment. If you want to make sure youre actually protecting civil rights and civil liberties, you have to push for changes that are actually going to bind future administrations.

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Mystery surrounds Justice's pledge on journalist records | TheHill - The Hill