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Daily Archives: July 5, 2017
Mother of accused NSA leaker defends daughter – KRISTV.com | Continuous News Coverage | Corpus Christi – KRIS Corpus Christi News
Posted: July 5, 2017 at 10:54 pm
KINGSVILLE -
The mother of a Kingsville native accused of leaking government information continues to stand up for her daughter. 25 year old Reality Winner remains in jail as she awaits her trial in federal court. She's charged with giving out information important to national security.
Billie Winner-Davis, her mother, wants people to wait for an outcome in that trial before judging her daughter.
"People, you know, just want to lock her up, throw away the key, or even hang her not knowing whether or not she did this, not knowing if she's guilty. She hasn't had a trial yet," Winner-Davis says.
Reality Winner is accused of sending classified information about Russian election meddling to a news outlet while she worked as a National Security Agency contractor in Georgia. The FBI says Winner admitted to leaking the information and prosecutors allege she said, "Mom, those documents. I screwed up.", in a recorded jail phone call.
"I really don't recall her saying those words to me. She could have, you know, maybe I've forgotten, you know?" Winner-Davis says.
Winner-Davis says she doesn't know if her daughter did it, adding she wants to ask but hasn't been able to, since all conversations between them have been recorded.
"I don't know if she would risk her entire life, if she would risk her new job that she just got, her future, her entire life for something like this," Winner-Davis says.
Winner-Davis calls her daughter a patriot. She references her daughter's time in the Air Force and some shirts paid for by supporters. One of the shirts has hash tags on it that say #TRUEPATRIOT and #ISTANDWITHREALITY.
"I'm afraid that she won't get a fair trial in this. I'm afraid that they're going to try to make an example out of her and I want the American people to be watching," Winner-Davis says.
Winner-Davis says that mainly because of President Trump's vow to crack down on leakers.
Reality Winner's trial is set for late October in Georgia. Her mom returned from there a few weeks ago and plans on going back in August. Billie Winner-Davis says she plans on staying through the end of her daughter's trial.
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Mother of accused NSA leaker defends daughter - KRISTV.com | Continuous News Coverage | Corpus Christi - KRIS Corpus Christi News
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The Bootlegger, the Wiretap, and the Beginning of Privacy – The New Yorker
Posted: at 10:53 pm
Nearly a century before a U.S. President accused his predecessor of ordering a tapp on his private telephone line, and before he tweeted a warning to the head of the F.B.I. that he had better hope that there are no tapes of our conversations, a professional spy, armed with a pack of cigarettes and an earpiece, hid in the basement of the Henry Building, in downtown Seattle, catching crackling bits of words being spoken miles away. Richard Fryant had worked as a wiretapper for the New York Telephone Company, tasked with eavesdropping on his own colleagues, and now took freelance assignments in the Queen City. On this occasion, he was seeking dirt on Seattles corrupt mayorwho was suspected of having ties to Roy Olmstead, a local bootleggerfor a political rival. At the behest of his client, Fryant rigged micro-wires to a certain exchange, ELliott-6785, and began to listen.
They got that load, one man said, breathing heavily.
The hell they didwho? asked another.
The federals.
The men speaking on ELliott-6785 hung up, but the conversation had only just begun.
Criminals and Prohibition officials alike called Olmstead the good bootlegger, a moniker that reflected his singular business philosophy. He never diluted his whiskey with water or corrupted it with poison; he declined to dabble in the seedier offshoots of his profession, such as drugs or prostitution; and he abhorred violence, forbidding members of his organization from carrying weapons (No amount of money is worth a human life, he cautioned). If apprehended, his men were instructed to rely on bribes instead of violence.
Olmstead had a particular respect for policemen, having been a member of the Seattle force for thirteen years, reaching the rank of lieutenant. In 1920, with the onset of Prohibition, the thirty-three-year-old married father of two ventured to the other side of the law, making midnight runs to retrieve imported Canadian liquor from tugboats in the Puget Sound. This practice earned his dismissal from the force and made him a local celebrity. With his old police colleagues on his payroll, he was free to conduct business brazenly and with impunity, often unloading his booze at high noon from trucks marked Fresh Fish. Seattle citizens were thrilled to glimpse Olmstead on the street, wearing a fine suit and carrying a wallet fat with money, always ready with a joke. As one acquaintance noted, It made a man feel important to casually remark, As Roy Olmstead was telling me today.
Olmsteads organization, comprised of an ever-growing staff of attorneys, dispatchers, clerks, skippers, navigators, bottlers, loaders, drivers, deliverymen, collectors, and salesmen, dominated the bootlegging scene in the Pacific Northwest. They relied heavily upon the telephone for day-to-day operations, using it to take orders, communicate updates on deliveries, and warn of impending raids, their words coursing across a web of wires connecting the citys fifty-two thousand devices (approximately one for every six citizens). Olmstead set up his communication headquarters in the Henry Building, just a block from the Federal Building, and established three exchanges: ELliott 6785, 6786, and 6787. One of his men, a former taxi dispatcher, sat during business hours at a roll-top desk, taking and making calls, keeping meticulous records of each transaction. If a serious matter arose, such as an employees arrest, Olmstead himself called a friend on the Seattle police force to have it quashed. At the end of each day, the dispatcher unplugged the three telephones, to stop their ceaseless ringing, and the routine began anew in the morning.
In early 1924, Olmstead was approached by Richard Fryant, the freelance wiretapper who had been hunkered down in the basement of the Henry Building, listening to Olmsteads lines. As the bootlegger would soon learn, Seattles Prohibition Director, William Whitney, had heard of Fryants surveillance and recruited him as a federal agent.
In Olmsteads version of events, Fryant presented him with a heavy stack of paper, explaining that the pages contained verbatim transcripts of conversations that had been conducted on the bootleggers office phone. For ten thousand dollars, Fryant said, the transcripts could be his. A quick perusal of the pages confirmed their authenticity.
A call from a cop to a worker at Olmsteads headquarters:
Down under the Fourth Avenue Bridge is a car with seven gallons of moonshine in it, and I was wondering if it is yours.
No . . . I dont think it is ours because we dont handle moonshine.
A call from Olmstead to the police station:
Hello, Roy, what is on your mind?
One of your fellows picked up one of my boys. . . . I dont give a damn what they do but I want to know before he is booked.
Ill take care of it for you, Roy.
A joking exchange between Olmstead and a dispatcher:
The federals will get you one of these days.
No, those sons of bitches are too slow to catch cold, Olmstead quipped,
Reading the pages, Olmstead maintained his composure. As a former police officer, he said, when hed finished reading, he knew a thing or two about the rules of evidence. Wiretapping was illegal in the state of Washington, so the pile of paper would be useless in a courtroom. Furthermore, Fryant could go straight to hell.
Olmsteads bravado did not prevent him from hiring a telephone repairman to search the Henry Building first thing in the morning. Together, they found and removed three temporary taps (affixed with coil wire rather than soldered)two in the basement and one in the womens restroom. Still unsettled, Olmstead returned the following day and discovered that all three taps were back.
Fryant and Whitneys wife, Clara, a skilled stenographer, continued to monitor ELliott-6785 from an office one floor below. At each days end, Clara gathered up the handwritten notes and typed them with fastidious precision. The pile of paper continued to grow.
For the first time in his bootlegger career, Olmstead started exercising some discretion about his wordsbut only some, because he still trusted that Fryants wiretapping evidence would never withstand legal scrutiny. When managing the arrival of his whiskey boats in Puget Sound, he used a public pay phone to issue instructions and directions. For less sensitive issues, he continued to use his office line, and even had fun at the wiretappers expense, calling Whitney profane names and giving false orders about the timing and location of deliveries. It amused him to imagine the Prohibition chief sitting alone in the freezing rain, grasping his gun and waiting for boats that would never come.
Whitneys patience paid off in October, 1924, when Canadian officials seized one of Olmsteads boats. Three months later, a federal grand jury returned an indictment against Olmstead and ninety co-defendants for conspiracy to violate the National Prohibition Act. The Whispering Wires case, as it came to be called, concluded with a guilty verdict, a fine of eight thousand dollars, and a sentence of four years hard labor. Convinced that his Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights had been violated (the right against unreasonable searches and seizures and against self-incrimination, respectively), Olmstead put his lawyers to work on Olmstead v. The United States. The Circuit Court of Appeals upheld his conviction, maintaining that, because the federal agents wiretapping pursuits did not require them to trespass on Olmsteads property or confiscate physical possessions, there had been no breach of rights.
The Supreme Court heard Olmstead v. The United States in February, 1928, and, in a 54 decision, upheld Olmsteads conviction. Chief Justice William Howard Taft, speaking for the majority, recognized the murky morality of wiretapping. Nevertheless, he argued that the practice served a greater good. A standard which would forbid the reception of evidence if obtained by other than nice ethical conduct by government officials would make society suffer and give criminals greater immunity than has been known heretofore, he wrote. He rejected the heart of Olmsteads case, insisting that the Amendment does not forbid what was done here. There was no searching. There was no seizure. . . . The reasonable view is that one who installs in his house a telephone instrument with connecting wires intends to project his voice to those quite outside.
The dissenting opinion was penned by Justice Louis Brandeis, for whom the issue of privacy was both ancient and increasingly, inescapably modern. In 1890, while practicing law in Boston, he had co-authored an article published by the Harvard Law Review titled The Right to Privacya manifesto, as Jill Lepore has written in this magazine, that argues for the existence of a legal right to be let alonea right that had never been defined before. Although the telephone was still decades away from being a familiar and necessary aspect of our lives, nearly every line of The Right to Privacy reveals prophetic insight into current concerns about how best to shield our innermost selves. The intensity and complexity of life have rendered necessary some retreat from the world, Brandeis wrote.
The Right to Privacy became a seminal work, and one that clearly influenced Brandeis himself as he considered Olmsteads case. When the Founding Fathers crafted the Constitution, he wrote in his dissent, the right to be left alone was inherent in the notion of pursuing happiness. To protect that right, every unjustifiable intrusion by the government upon the privacy of the individual, whatever the means employed, must be considered a violation of the Fourth Amendment. . . . If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for the law.
The media, although invested in a world where sensitive information might be easily and readily obtained, largely favored Brandeiss view. The Times declared that the Olmstead decision allowed universal snooping. The New Haven Journal-Courier predicted that every Tom, Dick and Harry would hereafter practice wiretapping without fear of reprisal. The editors of the weekly magazine Outlook were even more blunt, likening the verdict to a new Dred Scott and predicting dire consequences: We must weather the devastating effects of a decision that outrages a peoples sense of a security which they thought they had.
Forty years later, the Supreme Court finally caught up with Justice Brandeis, refining the Olmstead decision in two separate cases. In June, 1967, Berger v. New York considered the appeal of Ralph Berger, a public-relations consultant who had been convicted of conspiracy to bribe the chairman of the New York State Liquor Authority. Under the authority of a New York statute, police wiretapped Bergers phone for two months, and played excerpts of their recordings during the trial. In a 63 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the New York law was too broad in its sweepspecifically too long, as the two-month surveillance amounted to a series of intrusions, searches, and seizures that violated the defendants Fourth Amendment rights.
Six months later, the Supreme Court directly addressed the legacy of the Olmstead decision, in the case of Charles Katz, a California man convicted of placing illegal gambling wagers across state lines. Without a warrant, F.B.I. agents wiretapped public pay phones along Sunset Boulevard, hiding the device atop the bank of booths and listening in as Katz placed bets in Miami and Boston. The Court of Appeals upheld Katzs conviction, concluding that, since there had been no physical entrance, his privacy had not been compromised. In a 71 ruling, the Supreme Court reversed this decision, arguing that the Fourth Amendment protects people, not places, and that its reach cannot depend on the presence or absence of a physical intrusion into any given space. Citing Justice Brandeiss manifesto, the Court established the protection of a persons general right to privacy (emphasis the Courts) and his right to be let alone.
Olmstead served his four-year sentence. Yet, in a way, he managed to win his case. Victory came in the form of a Presidential pardon, granted by Franklin D. Roosevelt, on Christmas Eve of 1935, which restored all of his rights as a citizen and cancelled the fine. Roosevelt was influenced, in part, by Olmsteads nascent transformation: hed quit drinking, converted to Christian Science, and started teaching the Bible to prisoners, who frequently asked if he was really *that *Roy Olmstead, the good bootlegger, the rum-running king of Puget Sound. His standard replyNo, not any more. The old Olmstead is deadamounted to fewer than a hundred and forty characters, and were the words he wished the whole world to hear.
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The Bootlegger, the Wiretap, and the Beginning of Privacy - The New Yorker
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Learning about the 2nd Amendment – Keokuk Gate City Daily
Posted: at 10:53 pm
MONTROSE About 30 people attended the Lee County Young Republicans second meeting Saturday at the Tri-State Gun Club in Montrose.
The first meeting of the newly-formed GOP group was devoted to the First Amendment. The Second Amendment, stating, A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed, was the focus of Saturdays meeting.
Each were given a pocket-sized Constitution of the United States book provided by the Wapello County Republicans, which were represented at the meeting. There were sign-up sheets for upcoming events this week, such as the Donnellson Fourth of July Parade and Lee County Fair.
Three safety rules
Tri-State Gun Club President Dave Hunold presented on a program on gun safety, which he reduced to a few rules.
He said if everyone followed these rules there would be no such thing as accidental injury involving a firearm.
The first rule is treat every gun as if it is loaded, Hunold said.
Hunold demonstrated that a person should always safety-check when they pick up a gun.
Secondly, Hunold said one should never point the gun at anything you cant pay for or replace.
The third rule is to keep ones finger off the trigger unless one intends to use the gun.
Hunold demonstrated how to use a gun. He described the design and model of three types of guns a revolver, semi automatic pistol and semi automatic shotgun. He also informed everyone about the most important parts of a gun the muzzle, trigger, barrel and magazine.
Gun control
Des Moines County Co-President Eric Marshall spoke to the group about gun control.
The firearm comes in as a device of protection, Marshall said. Its something for Americans to protect themselves from those that wish to do them harm.
He added that there are irresponsible and responsible ways to use a gun. He said as long as it is properly handled there shouldnt be any problems.
He explained how there are some restrictions on gun usage in different countries and in the United States.
Marshall said that there is a lot more publicity about guns being used improperly than instances when they are used properly.
Capitol trip
After Marshall spoke, Wapello County Republicans Chair Trudy Caviness announced there will be a trip to the State Capitol at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, July 18. Lunch will be provided at the Republican headquarters. Anyone who is interested in joining the group can contact Caviness at 641-684-7585 by July 14.
After the meeting was over, everyone was invited to participate in trapshooting.
Lee County Young Republican Chair Jordean Stein said that it was a great turnout, with the number of young and older people that came.
Third Amendment is next
The next meeting will be about the Third Amendment on Saturday, Sept. 2, at the Keokuk National Cemetery.
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Learning about the 2nd Amendment - Keokuk Gate City Daily
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Sorry Gavin, Your Civilian Disarmament Agenda Does Not Trump the Second Amendment – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Posted: at 10:53 pm
by C.D. Michel
U.S.A. -(Ammoland.com)- On June 29 2017, Cuban-born Federal District Court Judge Roger T. Benitez issued aninjunctionin an NRA and CRPA supported lawsuit that challenges Californias laws prohibiting the possession of standard capacity firearm magazines.
For now at least, Judge Benitezs ruling in the Duncan v. Becerra case stops the ban from taking effect. More generally, and perhaps more significantly, it affirms that the Second Amendment is not a second class right, and must be respected and protected by the courts.
In 1960, when he was 10 years old, Judge Benitez emigrated from communist controlled Cuba to the United States. He was accompanied by his 13-year old brother, but his mother was initially unable to accompany them because she had been arrested by Castros forces on suspicion of sympathizing with the United States Government. After being held for three days without being allowed to call a lawyer or her family, she was fortunately released, and was eventually able to escape Castros regime.
Judge Benitez familys experiences under communist rule have impacted his judicial career, and apparently shaped his thinking. Thursdays well-reasoned and meticulously thorough 66-page decision to issue an injunction stopping California law from turning hundreds of thousands of California gun owners into criminals demonstrates that. It shows Judge Benitezs profound respect for, and appreciation of, the freedoms enshrined in the United States Constitution an appreciation likely brought into sharp relief compared to the oppressive dictatorship he and his family lived through.
It seems the Judge has seen how insidious government infringements on civil rights can be, and grasps how the Founding Fathers shaped the Bill of Rights to protect us from statist politicians incrementally increasing those infringements, even in the beguilingly alluring name of public safety.
The ruling is welcome news for gun owners who are under siege from shrewd California lawmakers with an extreme progressive agenda. Last year California politicians were faced with a threat from Gavin Newsoms self-promoting Prop 63 as he vied to seize the mantle of the King-of-Gun-Control from Senator Kevin DeLeon so he could build his name recognition in his gubernatorial campaign. So they raced to pass a number of gun bans that have collectively become known as Gunmageddon. Both Prop 63 and Gunmaggedon included a ban on the possession of standard capacity magazines that can hold more than ten rounds. Although acquisition and importation of the magazines had been banned since 2000, under the new laws gun owners were compelled to dispossess themselves of the magazines by July 1. Its government confiscation with a mustache. But by issuing the preliminary injunction, Judge Benitez instead preserved the status quo while the constitutionality of the ban is fully litigated in court, where plaintiffs are seeking to eventually have a permanent injunction issued.
Unsurprisingly Newsom, Prop 63s main proponent, was unhappy with the decision. As he stated to Fox News, large-capacity magazines enable murderers to unleash dozens of rounds without having to stop and reload.
But to quote the landmark case of District of Columbia v. Heller, the enshrinement of constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy choices off the table. And despite Prop 63s purported public safety interests, those interests may not eviscerate the Second Amendment, as Judge Benitez put it.
Even so, Newsoms claim that banning these magazines would somehow save lives is pure fallacy. To support this policy choice, attorneys for the government offered a number of studies and expert testimonies trying to prop up that claim. But unlike some courts that have almost blindly accept the governments claims without scrutinizing the evidence, Judge Benitez took a close look. He found that states evidence was inconclusive at best. One of those experts admitted that it is not clear how often the ability to fire more than 10 shots without reloading . . . affects the outcomes of gun attacks. Another so-called expert cited nothing more than news articles in concluding that the bans on large capacity magazines can help save lives by forcing mass shooters to pause and reload ammunition.
As Judge Benitez correctly notes, the burden of justification is demanding and it rests entirely on the State. In order to meet this burden, the State cannot get away with shoddy data or reasoning. But in this case, the States evidence is nothing more than a false dichotomy. For as a purely public policy choice, a government may declare that firearms of any capacity are dangerous in the hands of criminals, while simultaneously concluding that firearms with larger than 10-round magazines in the hands of law-abiding citizens makes every individual safer and the public as a whole safer. As a result, banning such magazines is hardly the reasonable fit constitutionally required to uphold such a ban.
In addition to the lack of evidentiary support for the policy being advocated, Judge Benitez bravely questioned the appropriateness of the trend of lower courts to apply a convoluted, multi-step test in scrutinizing the constitutionality of gun control laws. Its a subjective test that lets judges put their fingers on the scales of justice, and almost always results in upholding any form of gun-control. But even if that test were applied here, Judge Benitez found the States evidence to be incomplete, unreliable, and speculative at best, flatly rejecting the States attempt to support its ban with anything less than hard facts and reasonable inferences drawn from convincing analysis.
Newsom wasnt the only one to criticize Judge Benitezs clear and well-founded reasoning. Having just recently suffering a defeat before the Office of Administrative Law, which rejected his Departments most recent proposed assault weapon regulations, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra put out a press release stating that Proposition 63 was overwhelmingly approved by voters to increase public safety and enhance security in a sensible and constitutional way.
But Judge Benitez was mindful that a majority of California voters approved Prop 63, just as he was equally mindful that the Constitution is a shield from the tyranny of the majority. If all that was needed to undermine constitutionally protected rights was a simple majority vote, the Constitution would long ago have lost all meaning. And without the Constitution to preserve and protect Americas civil liberties we could, and given that bureaucrats crave power and power inevitably corrupts almost certainly eventually would, find ourselves under oppressive government regimes like those of 1960s Cuba.
Of course, this wont stop the state from appealing the decision to the Ninth Circuit, where the politicians hope to find a more sympathetic audience that will bend over intellectually backwards to defer to the governments arguments.
To learn more about the Duncan case, as well as other NRA / CRPA lawsuits brought to protect the rights of California gun owners, subscribe to NRA and CRPA email alerts. And please take a moment to consider donating to the CRPA Foundation, to support the Duncan case, and other NRA / CRPA efforts in California. About: CalGunLaws.comis an online research resource designed primarily for use by attorneys and interested firearm owners. CalGunLaws.com strives to provide easy access to and facilitate understanding of the multitude of complex federal, state, and local firearm laws and ordinances, administrative and executive regulations, case law, and past and current litigation that defines the California firearms regulatory scheme in theory and practice.
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Sorry Gavin, Your Civilian Disarmament Agenda Does Not Trump the Second Amendment - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
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First Amendment Issues in the News – Legal Reader (blog)
Posted: at 10:52 pm
There have been a number of First Amendment issues in the news recently. Some are rehashes of the same old battles, and others give us more to chew on.
Remember that one about the Christian baker and the gay wedding cake? Yep, thats one of the First Amendment issues coming around again. This fall, newly topped up with conservative darling Neil Gorsuch, the Supreme Court will hear an appeal of theColorado case. Masterpiece Cake Shop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission concerns Colorado baker Jack Phillips, who refused to bake a cake for the wedding reception being held by David Mullins and Charlie Craig. Mullins and Craig were legally married in Massachusetts in 2012.
Phillips claims that baking the cake would violate his free exercise of religion and would also constitute coerced speech. Lower courts have consistently held that baking a cake would do neither of these, but is considered to be illegal discrimination due to the couples sexual orientation. This last bit is of key importance when only 22 states have anti-discrimination laws that extend protection to gay people. On one hand, the cake fight is bigger than it first appears: its a proxy in the culture war, and will have an outsized impact on the way some civil rights issues are decided in the future. On the other hand, if baking a cake means that the baker is actually endorsing or taking part in a same-sex union, perhaps gun shop owners will one day be considered to have participated in any crimes committed with the guns they sold. Hey, its possible, right?
Next in the series of First Amendment issues is the Trinity Lutheran v. Comer decision. The Supremes came down on the side of Trinity Lutheran, the church whose ministry involved running a daycare and playground for children. Amazingly, seven of nine justices agreed (for differing reasons) that public funds could not be denied to a church simply because it has a religious mission. Although some majority-opinion justices used language meant to limit the scope of their decision, theidea that governments must provide resources directly to a religious organization has implications for many future policy fights sure to arise, including funding of faith-based education. However, if funds provided to beef up a church playground are not considered fungible in the context of the Establishment clause, perhaps similarly non-fungible funds can be provided for Planned Parenthoods public health mission, free from any involvement with the Hyde Amendment.
Its not just the Supreme Court ruling on recent First Amendment issues. A Montana state court recently decided that the USDAs checkoff program constituted a form of coerced speech, paid for by the states independent cattle ranchers. Checkoff programs are tiny, mandatory taxes paid by producers of certain agricultural commodities. These funds go towards marketing efforts that supposedly benefit the producers of that commodity. This is where ad campaigns like Got Milk? or Beef: Its Whats For Dinner come from. In this case, the Montana Beef Council used checkoff money to partially fund a commercial claiming that Wendys fast food hamburgers are made using North American beef. American ranchers rankled at having to pay to promote Canadian and Mexican beef exports. As a result, the ranchers must still pay the dollar-per-head checkoff, but non-governmental organizations will only receive a portion of the proceeds from ranchers who opt in.
One of the First Amendment issues before Congress is whether or not churches should be able to back political candidates while also retaining their tax-exempt status. House Republicans amended a spending bill to de-fund IRS efforts at enforcing the Johnson Amendment, originally signed into law by Dwight Eisenhower in 1954. While priests and pastors have always been free, as private citizens, to endorse any political position they like, this would potentially turn the pulpit itself into your Facebook feed, minus the cat pictures. Interestingly, non-Christian houses of worship, such as mosques and synagogues, dont seem to be included in the conservative liberalization effort.
Finally, lest we mistake First Amendment issues as being about the rights of all Americans to express their sincerely held beliefs, we get to those whose free speech matters most: the wealthy. Since the landmark Citizens United decision in 2010, money has been even more equated with speech than ever before. Those with wallets full of words wasted no time making sure that their shouting could be heard over those who could afford only humble whispers. In this case, our loudest citizens are insisting that an agenda that benefits them at the cost of most of the rest of us be passed post haste, or the checkbooks would close and perhaps the Republicans would lose their majority in Congress in the next election. One can only hope.
Related: Fungibility Key in Trinity Lutheran Case
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First Amendment Issues in the News - Legal Reader (blog)
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Facebook Challenges Gag Order, Cited First Amendment Rights – Legal Reader (blog)
Posted: at 10:52 pm
A gag order was recently issued by a U.S. court preventing Facebook from commenting about three government search warrants issued over a three-month period. The warrants were accompanied by a nondisclosure order from a District of Columbia Superior Court judge which barred the company from notifying its users about the warrants before Facebook agreed to comply. Facebook responded, challenging the order. The company cited the First Amendment and the right to freedom of speech.
Officials say that have a right to notify the three users about the warrants seeking their communication and information. They claim the users should have a fair opportunity to object to such searches. The company released the following statement, We believe there are important First Amendment concerns with this case, including the governments refusal to let us notify three people of broad requests for their account information in connection with public events.
The underlying premise of the governments investigation is still not clear. However, its been speculated that it is affiliated with protesting attempts at the Donald Trump inauguration in which 200 people were taken into custody. The warrants are tied to potential felony charges, and neither the governments investigation nor its interest in Facebook user information was secret, according to the social media king.
Facebook receives thousands of requests from the government for user date annually and complies without question. However, in this particular case, the company cited it has decided to challenge the order because it believes in the protection of the First Amendment. Those who agree with Facebooks stance say that the gag order relies on outdated laws. In April, a local judge in Washington denied Facebooks request to remove it, according to court records, but Facebook cited this was unconstitutional and has appealed the original judgment. In a June 14th order, a three-judge panel of the DC Court of Appeals ruled that an unsealed notice about the case could be provided to any groups that Facebook deems necessary and briefs in support of Facebook were due by June 30th. The government can only insulate its actions from public scrutiny in this way in the rarest circumstances, which likely do not apply here, said attorney Andrew Crocker.
The Constitution can offer adequate protection only if the targets of seemingly overbroad warrants, such as those at issue here, know their rights are under threat, American Civil Liberties Union attorneys and Public Citizen Litigation Group wrote. Arthur Spitzer, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of the District of Columbia added that the scope of the warrants served on Facebook is like a warrant telling officers to seize all the papers and photographs in someones home, so prosecutors can peruse them at leisure looking for evidence. This violates the Fourth Amendment, which requires that warrants must particularly describ[e] the things to be seized a requirement that was designed to prohibit just such general warrants.
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals the highest court in Washington for local matters is scheduled to hear the case sometime in September.
Facebook challenges US gag order, claiming free speech
Facebook fights U.S. gag order that it says chills free speech
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Facebook Challenges Gag Order, Cited First Amendment Rights - Legal Reader (blog)
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BRIEF-ATyr pharma enters into first amendment to loan and security agreement – Reuters
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BRIEF-ATyr pharma enters into first amendment to loan and security agreement Reuters NEW YORK, July 5 U.S. bank regulators disclosed on Wednesday how eight of the nation's largest banks would wind themselves down in the face of collapse and gave American International Group Inc (AIG) and Prudential Financial Inc an extra year to ... |
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BRIEF-Halozyme Therapeutics, unit entered into first amendment to amended, restated lease with BMR-11388 … – Reuters
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BRIEF-Halozyme Therapeutics, unit entered into first amendment to amended, restated lease with BMR-11388 ... Reuters Reuters is the news and media division of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news ... |
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Darknet 101: Your guide to the badlands of the internet – CNET – CNET
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Hacked login details. Cybersecurity exploits for hire. Drugs, guns and ammo. If there's something shady going on online, chances are it's happening on the darknet.
When Target was hacked in 2013, customer card details turned up on darknet marketplaces. Hackers have tried to do the same with Yahoo login credentials, and details of O2 phone network customers in the UK.
You'll also find cybercriminals selling security exploits. Ransomware, anyone?
Everything's for sale if you look in the right place. And with the rise of bitcoin, the "currency of choice" on the darknet, virtually anonymous payments are easier than ever.
Just this week in Australia, a news investigation revealed that an anonymous darknet user has offered up access to the Medicare records of "any Australian" for just 0.0089 bitcoin ($22, AU$30, 18).
That's not to mention the things you really don't want to see. Europol says the darknet and other peer-to-peer networks are still the "main platform" for sharing child abuse material.
So for those of us used to opening Chrome or Safari to get online, the darknet is an entirely different beast. How does it work? How is it different from the "surface web" that we all know? And what do you need to know ahead of time, should you choose to wade in?
The first thing to remember: The darknet is not the same as the "deep web."
The deep web refers to any part of the internet that isn't discoverable by a search engine. But that doesn't mean it's suspicious -- there are plenty of sites you visit in your day-to-day browsing that fall into this category.
When you log in to internet banking, you've navigated to a specific location online, but one that's not served up in Google results. The same goes for the different pages that pop up in webmail services, like Gmail, or academic databases on a university network.
It's hard to estimate just how big the deep web is, but the commonly cited research (albeit from 2001) puts the deep web at 400 to 550 times the size of the "surface web."
If the surface web is the tip of the iceberg and the deep web is what's below the water, then the darknet is what you'll find deep in the blackest waters below. The darknet is the network itself, whereas the dark web is the content that is served up on these networks.
This is where you'll find the kind of marketplaces that ply their trade in illicit wares -- what security researcher Brian Krebs calls the "hidden crime bazaars that can only be accessed through special software that obscures one's true location online."
The UN noted last month that although drug trafficking over the darknet is relatively modest, drug transactions increased 50 percent annually from September 2013 to January 2016. And in early 2016, then-US Attorney General Loretta Lynch warned that some gun sales were shifting to the dark web to stay outside the reach of regulations.
Anonymity is the key here. Whistleblowers, activists and political dissidents certainly have good reason to obscure their online location and post with anonymity on the deep web and the darknet, but that level of secrecy is also sought by criminals.
This isn't just a matter of heading to "darknet.com" and having a snoop -- you'll need specific software and a dedicated browser. The Tor software (and its dedicated Tor Browser) is probably the most famous of these, though there are others, including I2P and Freenet.
Using software originally known as The Onion Router (think layers and layers of encryption), Tor secures traffic by routing it through a network of secure relays that anonymize traffic. These relays are run by volunteers around the world who donate their server bandwidth.
Think of it as a network of safe houses: You travel through underground tunnels that run along the lines of the streets above, and you pop out where you want using safe houses donated by fellow network users.
But with links on the darknet typically just alphanumeric strings of nonsense (think kwyjibo.onion) it can be very hard to know what you're getting.
It's important to remember that Tor isn't illegal software, just as torrenting software doesn't do anything illegal until you use it for sharing pirated movies. Tor says plenty of"normal people" use its service, as well as citizen journalists, whistleblowers, law enforcement agencies and, according toHuman Rights Watch, Chinese dissidents. Tor estimates that onlyabout 4 percent of trafficover its network is for hidden services (or dark web content); the rest is people accessing regular internet sites with greater anonymity.
Still, wherever you have anonymous traffic on hidden networks, the criminal activity will follow.
It's the darknet after all -- be careful what you click for.
Tech Culture: From film and television to social media and games, here's your place for the lighter side of tech.
Batteries Not Included: The CNET team shares experiences that remind us why tech stuff is cool.
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How to safely search the deep web – The Sydney Morning Herald
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The deep web and its inner recess, the dark web those less well-trodden parts of the internet beyond the reach of Google and Bing are not for the faint-hearted or untrained. With the right tools, however, there's little to fear and plenty to discover. Here's how you can start exploring the deep web without having to worry about your digital well-being.
There are a few ways to approach this, but we're going to focus on one of the most straightforward and secure for simplicity's sake. We're going to be usingTails OS, a bootable operating system that includes everything you need to get down to those hidden parts of the web.
If you're still unclear about what the deep web is, it's any part of the internet that's not indexed by search engines. Anywhere you can't get from just clicking links. A large part of the deep web is made up of.onionsites (likethe infamous Silk Road), which use a special top-level domain only reachable by a special browser called Tor. Technically, the dark web is a more illicit subsection of the deep web, though the terms are often confused.
For the curious or privacy-conscious internet explorer, it's worth checking out to see what lies beyond the internet we interact with on a day to day basis. But please note: you should be extra careful when clicking links on the deep web as some can lead toillegal sites. Browse at your own risk.
Fortunately Tails hasan installation wizardthat guides you step-by-step through the process of setting up the software. If you want to create a bootable USB copy of Tails (which we do), then you need a Windows machine and two 4GB+ USB sticks (the first is for an "intermediary" version of the OS).
You're also going to requireFirefox, theTor Browseror aBitTorrent clientin order to verify the initial download and confirm it is what it says it is. On top of that you need a Universal USB Installer utility, which the installation wizard directs you to, which will take care of creating the first USB stick using your downloaded Tails ISO.
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After that's done, boot from this newly created drive to configure the second one.This official guidetakes you carefully through the process. Use the 'Install by cloning' option in the Tails Installer to create your second USB stick, which includes some security enhancements and extras not built into the first one.
Finally, remove the first USB stick, keep the second in place, and boot from it. You're now ready to start venturing out into the deep web. If you run into trouble (and we hit one or two obstacles along the way), then a general web search for your issue orthe official Tails support portalshould get you moving again.
The Tor Browseris your gateway into the dark web. You can actually use it on Mac and Windows too, but Tails OS adds an extra few layers of security, and comes with Tor included. The browser is based on Firefoxso you shouldn't have many problems finding your way aroundand will open the Tails OS homepage by default.
As you might expect, browsing the deep web isn't quite as simple as clicking on a few links or searching Google. The best way in is through 'hidden' wikislike this one(note you won't be able to click through on any onion links without the Tor browser) and various others you can find via Reddit or with some clever web searching on sites likeDuckDuckGo.
Of course the whole point of the deep web is that casual internet users can't simply fire up Google or read a guide like this to get started easily,so finding working, up-to-date links and directories can take some time. Forums, plenty of patience, and occasionallythe Torch search engineare your best bets for finding a way into new communities.
The deep web has a reputation for shady activity, but it's also a place for whistleblowing, bitcoin exchanges, and political discussion away from the glare of the public internet. It's changed a lot in recent years as security agencies have become more aware of its presence, and it will continue to evolve in the future.
The Tor browser protects you by routing your traffic through various different IP locations (and you'll probably notice your web connection slows down a lot as a result).
And as we've already mentioned,Tails OS includes extra security featureslike built-in encryption, and because you're running it on a USB stick you really are leaving no trace. Tails itself stands for The Amnesiac Incognito Live System, which just about sums up why it's one of the best options for some deep web browsing.
Don't compromise that security and anonymity by giving away personal details, including email addresses and so on, and keep downloading to a minimum. Once you've set up Tails, it's generally common sense. But if you're up to something illegal, you can't rely on these security measures to protect you.
As for whether using Tor will get you in trouble with the authorities on its own, it largely depends where in the world you live and what you're doing with it, but it's worth bearing in mind thatnothing is ever 100 per cent anonymous and secure. For the most paranoid, there's always the option of tape over the webcam but sometimes even that might not be enough.
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