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Monday, September 16, 2024

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Over the course of two hours, the three-judge panel focused more on the popular video-sharing app's foreign ownership than the potential impacts on American's speech.

Police officer with machine gun

Germany, the European Union's largest and most powerful nation, has brought police back to its border crossings in a bid to curb migration and stop Islamic terrorists. But many worry the era of a border-free Europe is coming to an end.

Column
Milt

Last week's presidential debate left a lot of questions unanswered.

by Milt Policzer

Closing Arguments

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YouTube chief Neal Mohan testified that Google wants to help publishers grow their slice of the pie, not monopolize ad tools.

Top News

Allowing judicial review of then-President Donald Trump’s decision to negotiate with Russia and Saudi Arabia would amount to second-guessing the executive branch’s foreign policy, the panel said.

While the special session is expected to center on a bill written by Democrats, Republicans hope to shape it with legislation of their own.

Podcast


Right-wing voter roll challenges and ACLU signature curing complaints are influencing how people think about voting and foreshadowing the post-election litigation to come in November and beyond.   

Rulings

Musician Eddy Grant secured a partial win in New York federal court on his claims that former President Donald Trump and his campaign improperly used the composition of Grant’s song “Electric Avenue” in an animated video during Trump’s 2020 campaign and on his personal Twitter account without Grant’s permission. The Trump campaign did not substantially alter the song, so its use was not transformative, and Trump and his campaign could not show they used the video in a non-commercial manner. In sum, use of the song was not defensible under the fair use doctrine.

The sex discrimination claims filed by a former waitress, now manager, survived the restaurant owner’s motion for summary judgment in North Carolina federal court. After the two had a relationship for three years, the owner began berating the woman, calling her names such as “gold-digging whore,” blocking her entrance to the restaurant and putting and electronic tracker on her car. This harassment was a pattern, not just one incident, so the manager’s sexually hostile workplace claims survive, and they are not time-barred.

An Illinois federal court ruled on various motions in the FTC’s case against convicted fraudster and infomercial personality Kevin Trudeau, who has since allegedly violated the settlement, contempt and consent orders that bar him from misrepresenting the benefits of any product he sold in infomercials. The FTC loses on its request to have Trudeau monitored or incarcerated, as this would not help consumers get reimbursed, but Trudeau loses on his attempt to lift a ban on him from traveling internationally.

Louisiana state corrections officials are not immune from a lawsuit brought by a pretrial detainee who was placed in a parish prison with convicted violent offenders. He says he was stabbed five times by two prisoners, who also poured scalding liquid on his face, burning him and injuring his eye; he was only moved after he was attacked again by two other prisoners. The Fifth Circuit has previously ruled that indiscriminately confining pretrial detainees with convicts is unconstitutional.

Cornell University won partial judgment on a former assistant professor’s defamation claim, though his Title IX gender-based discrimination claim against the university was preserved for trial. His lawsuit stems from allegations that he lied about having a romantic relationship with a female student, rumors that resulted in a two-week unpaid suspension. He’s brought enough detail for a jury to conclude that his suspension and the related investigation was motivated by anti-male bias, but he couldn’t show any way Cornell published defamatory statements to third parties about him.

From the Walt Girdner Studio
Quick Hits

The Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians accuse the feds of incomplete environmental analysis and threatening its traditional and cultural resources by approving offshore wind farms on the Oregon coast.

The European Union reported a nearly $23.6 billion trade surplus in July, compared to a $7.4 billion surplus in July 2023.

United Sovereign Americans accuses Colorado of allowing “thousands of apparent errors” in its 2022 voter registration rolls and wants a judge to ensure only “votes properly cast” are counted in the upcoming general election.

Tucker Carlson's stepsister says he and his brother have been improperly interpreting the will of Gilbert C. Swanson — her grandfather and a former operator of the Swanson frozen food empire — to receive over $2,000 per month.

GirlsDoPorn founder Michael James Pratt is now set to stand trial on Sept. 2, 2025. The judge said scheduling it one year in advance was justified due to how unusual and expansive the case is, with survivors from across the country and Canada expected to testify.

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