Gators Attack Juicy Campus
University of Florida Student Body President, Kevin Riley, and Chief Information Officer, Marc Hoit, recently issued this letter to the Florida Attorney General asking that the Florida Office of the
University of Florida Student Body President, Kevin Riley, and Chief Information Officer, Marc Hoit, recently issued this letter to the Florida Attorney General asking that the Florida Office of the
One wonders what awful experiences in Kevin Martin’s life must have twisted him into the modern day Comstock. His latest proposal is to provide free broadband nationwide, but the company
In Frazier v. Winn, __F.3d__ (11th Cir. 2008), the Eleventh Circuit struck down part of Florida’s Pledge of Allegiance statute, Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1) and upheld part of it. The
From Commercial Appeal via hawkhead at biglawboard Memphis Police Director Larry Godwin and the city of Memphis have filed a lawsuit to learn who operates a blog harshly critical of
The Times gave Obama some editorial space, and McCain submitted his own response. The op-ed editor, David Shipley, a former Clinton speechwriter and special assistant to Billy wrote: I’d be
George Lilly, a Republican candidate for congress in Colorado’s First District makes this following lofty statement on his website: The oath of office to uphold and defend the Constitution is
COPA is Congress’ attempt to revive the Communications Decency Act, which was a Congressional attempt to expand indecency rules to the Intertubes. On the heels of United States v. Stevens,
Someone must have conjured the spirit of Thomas Jefferson this week. The Third Circuit has issued three cases, in one week, that breathe new life into the wilting flower of
When, oh when, will the FCC learn that it too is governed by the First Amendment? The Third Circuit held that although the FCC possesses the authority to regulate indecent
I can sellz video? INTRODUCTION If there is one fixed star in our constitutional sky, it is that content-based restrictions on free expression are repugnant and almost never permissible. If
In 2002, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, 535 U.S. 425 (2002) as the most recent hight court pronouncement on the adverse secondary effects
This post is a corrected version. The New York Times and Simple Justice report on a Bronx District Attorney’s First Amendment overreach. Somebody in the Bronx District Attorney’s office (nobody