Archive for the ‘First Amendment’ Category

Trump’s attack on First Amendment press freedoms puts reporters at the tip of the spear – Daily Kos

It's impossible to view Montana Republican Greg Gianforte's assault on journalist Ben Jacobs in isolation. As many outlets are now pointing out, the number of threatening incidents this month alone is startling. The AP writes:

The editor of Alaskas largest newspaper said a state senator slapped one of his reporters when the reporter sought the lawmakers opinion on a recently published article.

A Washington-based reporter from CQ Roll Call said he was pinned against the wall by security guards and forced to leave the Federal Communications Commission headquarters after he tried to question an FCC commissioner after a news conference.

A West Virginia journalist was arrested after yelling questions about the opioid epidemic at U.S. Health Secretary Tom Price.

We've all watched Donald Trump stoke this fire among his base for monthscasting reporters as the enemy of the American people and news outlets as "evil" and hellbent on treating him unfairly.

On the campaign trail, Trump's ire had a trickle-down effect.

At one rally, a man was photographed in a shirt that read, Rope. Tree. Journalist. Some Assembly Required.

It should be little wonder now that $100,000 worth of donations poured into Gianforte's coffers as news of his attack and unrepentant statement following it spread across the country.

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Trump's attack on First Amendment press freedoms puts reporters at the tip of the spear - Daily Kos

Owners of Bucks Racks & Ribs file 1st Amendment suit against County, Sheriff’s Office – Greenville News

Buck's Racks and Ribs was cited by the Greenville County Sheriff's Office Wednesday.(Photo: Provided)

A Greenville restaurant that has opened in the location of a former strip clubhas filed a lawsuitagainst the county and the Sheriff's Office, alleging thebusiness's rights to freedom of expression are being violated, according to court documents.

In a suit filed on May 23, Greenville Bistro and Frontage Road Associates, operator and lesseeof BucksRacks & Ribs, nameGreenville County and Sheriff Will Lewis and allegethe county violated an agreement reached by prior business, Platinum Plus, in 2002 and again in 2015, after owners, Elephant, Inc., filed a suit against the county.

The parties say in the suit that entertainment provided by Greenville Bistro constitutes free expression protected by the First Amendment.

The suit statesthat while the restaurant on 805 Frontage Road,hasno affiliation to Elephant, Inc.,itdoespractice a "similar business" as the former occupant,and that the county treats the business as a sexual adult establishment. The county is attempting to prevent, "any form of entertainment or expression at the property" by issuing citations and violation notices, according to the suit.

No employee of the current establishment"appears in a state of nudity,engages in any specified sexual activities, or displays any specified anatomical areas, according to the plaintiffs.

On Wednesday, the restaurant received three citations from Greenville County deputies after deputies performing a compliance check witnessed someone exposing an unlawfulamount of flesh, said Sgt. Ryan Flood, Sheriff's Officespokesman.

It was the second time this year, the restauranthas beenissued citations by the Sheriff's Office.

The plaintiffs are seekinga jury trial and repaymentof attorney fees.

Bannister, Wyatt & Stalvey, LLC in Greenville,representing the plaintiffscould not be reached for comment. Luke Charles Lirot, out ofClearwater, Florida, is also listed as a co-counsel for the plaintiffs.

More: Once a strip club, now a restaurant

Related: Greenville County paid law firm $79K for Platinum Plus litigation

More: Platinum Plus Greenville ordered to close again

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Owners of Bucks Racks & Ribs file 1st Amendment suit against County, Sheriff's Office - Greenville News

Conversion therapy ban violates First Amendment – Mesquite Local News

Gov. Brian Sandoval signed into law this past week a legislatively passed bill that makes it illegal for any psychotherapist in Nevada to provide conversion therapy to anyone under the age of 18.

Senate Bill 201 defines conversion therapy as any practice or treatment that seeks to change the sexual orientation or gender identity of a person.

It states this therapy is barred regardless of the willingness of the person or his or her parent or legal guardian to authorize such therapy. The bill description justifies this usurpation of individual and parental rights by claiming the practice is ineffective and potentially harmful.

In a statement released to the press, the bills chief sponsor, state Sen. David Parks of Las Vegas, said, Banning conversion therapy makes Nevada a safer place for children who are at a higher risk of anxiety, depression, substance abuse and even suicide.

But what is therapy? These days it is not torture, electric shock or some emersion in aversion straight out of A Clockwork Orange. It is talk. You know, free speech.

But SB201 dictates that some speech is permissible while other speech is not. While it prohibits speech that might prompt a person to reconsider his or her sexual orientation or gender identity, it specifically allows support or confirmation for a person undergoing gender transition or provides acceptance, support and understanding of a person or facilitates a persons ability to cope, social support and identity exploration and development

It is a one-way street. The courts have repeatedly ruled that laws that limit speech based solely on its content violates the First Amendment.

Presumably, if a professional merely talked to a minor about the results of years of research and studies and that talk resulted in a change of attitude about sexual orientation, that would be illegal under the law. Facts matter for naught.

Drs. Paul McHugh and Lawrence Mayer of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have written that 80 to 95 percent of all children who express feelings of gender dysphoria abandon those feelings upon maturity and that more than 80 percent of youth claiming to experience same-sex attractions in late childhood and adolescence identified themselves as exclusively heterosexual upon becoming adults. Would telling a minor to let nature take its course violate the law?

A late amendment to the law makes a ham-fisted attempt to protect religious counselors from being punished under the law, but it is so convoluted as to be indecipherable and totally useless. It tries to tiptoe around the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment, but instead does a Mexican hat dance.

It states there is nothing in this bill that regulates or prohibits licensed health care professionals from engaging in expressive speech or religious counseling with such children if the licensed health care professionals: (1) are acting in their pastoral or religious capacity as members of the clergy or as religious counselors; and (2) do not hold themselves out as operating pursuant to their professional licenses when so acting in their pastoral or religious capacity.

They have to take off their professional licensee hat and put on their clerical hat.

A group called the Alliance Defending Freedom points out the Catch-22 in that.

Nevada law states that it is unlawful for any person to engage in the practice of marriage and family therapy unless the person is licensed the Alliance points out. Telling licensed professionals that they can only engage in certain speech and activities if they do so outside of the umbrella of their license exposes them to ethical and legal liability. It places them between a rock and a hard place. If they do the counseling under their license, they violate SB 201; if they do it outside the scope of their license, they violate another law.

What a tangled web lawmakers weave when they decide they know whats best for young people, and they and their parents dont.

The Latin phrase is in loco parentis, meaning in the place of a parent. The emphasis should be on the loco. Someone should challenge the constitutionality of this law in court.

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Conversion therapy ban violates First Amendment - Mesquite Local News

Attacking the First Amendment with mask bill is wrong and a waste of legislators’ time – The Seattle Times

Washington has mistakenly joined a handful of other states in what appears to be a coordinated effort to battle the First Amendment.

A proposal to prohibit protesters from wearing masks or hoods during demonstrations is so obviously unconstitutional, its a wonder state Sen. Jim Honeyford, R-Sunnyside, thought it was a good idea.

The Legislature already decided to not even give a hearing to a related proposal from Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, earlier in the session. That one would have made it a crime for protesters to cause economic disruption, such as blocking railroad tracks.

The First Amendment is a powerful protection of the right to free speech and all manner of peaceful protest, masked or unmasked. But the people of Washington state already know that.

Lawmakers have much bigger problems to solve right now, such as passing a state budget and answering the Supreme Courts 2012 McCleary decision on school funding.

So why are these bills popping up in our state this year? According to the National Lawyers Guild, anti-protesting legislation is a national trend, partially tied to protests after the presidential election.

Lawmakers in at least 19 states have proposed bills that would criminalize or penalize protesting in various ways. A handful focus on tampering with infrastructure or trespassing. Missouri also proposed a mask law. Among the most alarming bills is one that would remove liability from drivers who accidentally hit and kill protesters.

Washington is used too often as a proving ground for ideas from out-of-state hyperpartisan groups from protest bills on the right to Democracy vouchers on the left, which were embraced by Seattle but rejected by statewide voters.

The mask bill would make it illegal for someone to stand on a sidewalk, road, alley or any public area with his face covered, but it grants religious and holiday exemptions.

Would the bill exempt people who wear heavy makeup because they are making a choice to alter their appearance? What if someone decides to cover her face for modesty or health reasons, but is not associated with any religion?

Just like Sen. Ericksens bill, Honeyfords bill should not get a hearing in any legislative committee. Lets cut the marionette strings and prevent coordinated attacks on the First Amendment from gaining a foothold in Washington state.

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Attacking the First Amendment with mask bill is wrong and a waste of legislators' time - The Seattle Times

Doctors Argue That Female Genital Mutilation Is Protected Under First Amendment – Broadly

In a landmark case, lawyers are claiming religious freedom to defend doctors facing charges for performing FGM on seven-year-olds in Michigan.

Two doctors in Detroit, along with one of their wives, are about to take the first religious defense of female genital mutilation to a US Federal court. The case stems from a FBI investigation into Dr. Jumana Nagarwala after the authorities received a tip that the physician was performing the procedure on young girls.

According to the original criminal complaint, the investigation revealed that Nagarwala allegedly performed FGM on two seven-year-old Jane Does, who had travelled from Minnesota with their families. When interviewed by the FBI, one girl said her parents told her she was going Detroit, along with the other child, for a "special girls' trip." After they arrived at the hotel, the girls said their parents took them to the doctor "to get the germs out" of their stomachs. One of the girls described what happened at the clinic, after she took off her pants and underwear, as a "pinch" on "the place [where] she goes pee." The other unnamed girl said that after she took off her pants and underwear she "got a shot," and then could barely walk.

Read more: Female Genital Mutilation and the Women Who Practice It

A winter glove that belonged to one of the girls was recovered at the clinic Nagarwala is said to have operated from. After obtaining a search warrant, an independent medical doctor performed an examination on one of the girls and found that "her clitoral hood has a small incision, and there is a small tear to her labia minor." It was later found that several other girls have allegedly been taken to Nagarwala for genital cutting. Charges have also been brought against the doctor who is accused of allowing Nagarwala to use his clinic, Dr. Fakhruddin Attar, and his wife, who allegedly was present during the procedures, according to the Detroit Free Press.

The publication also reports that Attar's lawyer, Mary Chartier, is planning on arguing that FGM is constitutionally protected under the First Amendment. The defendants are all a part of the Dawoodi Bohra community, which is an Indian Islamic sect. FGM is illegal in the United States, but Chartier says that the law is "unconstitutionally vague and overly broad." She also makes a distinction between FGM and the procedure that the Nagarwala allegedly performed.

"We know there is female genital mutilation. No one is saying it doesn't exist. But what we're saying is this procedure does not qualify as FGM," Chartier told the Detroit Free Press. "And even if it did, it would be exempt because it would violate their First Amendment rights. They believe that if they do not engage in this then they are not actively practicing their religion."

Nicholas Little, the legal director at the Center for Inquiry, doesn't think this argument will hold up. "It is important to note that there's no constitutional right to an exemption from a law of general applicability based on religious belief," he told Broadly. "Under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, however, a person is entitled to an exemption if they can show that the law substantially burdens their exercise of a sincerely held belief." He adds that an exception can be denied if the government has a compelling interest to do so, which in this case would clearly be "the protection of a seven-year-old child from an abusive procedure."

"While courts have become more willing to grant religious exemptions, I find it very unlikely they will do so to permit this to be done to a child," he explained. "Initially, such exemptions were only sought and granted for self impacting actionssuch as, for example, a Native American using peyote in a religious ceremony. The Supreme Court, in Hobby Lobby, dramatically and wrongly, in my opinion, extended this, allowing a religious corporation to opt out of a law when such an opt out would cause harm to a third party, the women denied access to free contraception. However, this would be a major step further, to allow direct harm to a child."

Rana Elmir, the deputy director of the ACLU of Michigan, agrees that freedom of religion "doesn't allow any of us to ignore laws protecting people from harm," adding that "[this] question before the court is not new."

Read more: How Islamophobia Hurts Muslim Women the Most

She cautions that this case should not be exploited to fuel Islamophobia in the US. "FGM is often erroneously connected to Muslim communities, when in fact it is a cultural practice. It is practiced by a limited number of adherents of the Muslim, Christian, and Jewish faiths, as well as some animists," Elmir said. "However, in the days after these charges came to light, legislators in Michigan introduced an anti-international law bill. While this bill itself may seem innocuous, it was clear by the sponsoring legislator's remarks that the bill was intended to block Sharia law, baselessly connecting sharia to the practice of FGM."

Indeed, many women from the Dawoodi Bohra sect have spoken out against the practice and described the harm it has caused them. Within the community it is referred to as khatna and forced on girls for "religious purity." Sahiyo, an anti-FGM organization which promotes an education-based approach to end the practice, was founded by a Dawoodi Bohra woman who underwent FGM as a resource for other survivors; the organization, too, has expressed concern about the Detroit case being used to expand surveillance of Muslim Americans.

"We have the absolute right to believe whatever we want about God, faith, and religion, and we have the right to act on our beliefs. But there's a distinct line drawn when those actions hurt others," Elmir said. "At the same time, we must also reject those who seek to exploit tragedy for political gain. While legislators may be driven by a desire to protect children, measures such as the anti-international law bill, are misguided, unnecessary and only serve to hurt and divide our communities by scapegoating and discriminating against Muslims, who have widely and vocally rejected this practice."

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Doctors Argue That Female Genital Mutilation Is Protected Under First Amendment - Broadly