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Cultivated Compendium is my personal website with the occasional link to my reporting and to important, cutting-edge or interesting legal news.


 

News and Reporting

February 10th, 2015
The Rhode Island State Police has been asking people visiting its barracks to submit photo IDs, even though the state's open-records law says that people can request public records anonymously, the Providence Journal's Amanda Milkovits reports. The policy for checking visitor IDs is meant to protect police officers in light of law enforcement killings in Paris, New York City and outside a Pennsylvania State Police barracks.... Continue Reading
February 10th, 2015
As of Monday afternoon, 49 of 67 counties in Alabama refused to issue same-sex marriage licenses in Alabama, Montgomery Advertiser's Brian Lyman reports. Even though a federal judge has struck down the state's ban on same-sex marriage, Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore has ordered the probate judges not to issue same-sex marriages. The U.S. Supreme Court also refused to grant a stay against the issuance of same-sex marriage licenses... Continue Reading
February 10th, 2015
Republican-sponsored bills to expand Medicaid in Wyoming died last week, the Casper Star Tribune's Trevor Graff and Laura Hancock report. The proposal would have expanded healthcare to 17,600 uninsured Wyomites, they report. One bill died in a Senate committee, and a similar bill was pulled from the House. Eric Boley, president of the Wyoming Hospital Association, "hospitals around the state are stuck with hundreds of millions of... Continue Reading
February 9th, 2015
Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore has ordered a ban on same-sex marriage licenses, even though a federal judge in Alabama has found the state's ban on same-sex nuptials unconstitutional, the Montgomery Advertiser's Brian Lyman reports. The stay on the federal court decision is set to expire today. The chief justice argued that federal district and appellate courts had no binding authority on state courts, Lyman reports. What effect... Continue Reading
February 8th, 2015
The Seventh Circuit ruled that the Chicag0 Sun-Times broke the law when it published the heights and weights of Chicago cops who acted as fillers in a police lineup, Kim Janssen reported for that newspaper. The cops' height, weight, eye color, hair color and months and years of their birthdates were private information that was improperly obtained from the officers' drivers licenses in violation of the Driver's Privacy... Continue Reading
February 8th, 2015
A referendum aiming to strengthen Slovakia's ban on same-sex marriage and same-sex adoption failed because of low turnout, BBC reports. Only 21 percent of those eligible voted. One of questions was whether marriage can only be between opposite-sex couples. Continue Reading
February 8th, 2015
The stars were aligned for Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam to expand Medicaid in his state to 280,000 low-income Tennesseans: "Hospitals and chambers of commerce endorsed the plan. A recent poll showed Haslam had an 86 percent approval rating among Republicans in the state, and he has a GOP supermajority in the House and Senate." But the plan died this week after a state Senate committee voted the plan down, The Tennessean's Dave... Continue Reading
February 7th, 2015
Three University of Pennsylvania bioethicists recently called for reestablishing mental asylums, The Inquirer's Stacey Burling reports. When  large-scale institutions for people with mental illness were abandoned decades ago, smaller, community-based institutions were not created to house people instead. Jails and emergency rooms have become the new mental asylums because there are few community-based beds for people with severe... Continue Reading
February 5th, 2015
Linda Greenhouse, writing in her regular column for the New York Times about the U.S. Supreme Court, suggests that the latest challenge to Obamacare may also fail before the justices because they would have to upend traditional ways of interpreting federal statutes in order to find for the challengers. At issue is "the validity of the Internal Revenue Service rule that makes the tax subsidies available to those who qualify by virtue... Continue Reading
February 5th, 2015
The Eleventh Circuit granted a stay Wednesday in litigation over same-sex marriage bans in Alabama, Georgia and Florida until the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of such laws, the Washington Blade reports. Continue Reading
February 3rd, 2015
The Eleventh Circuit has denied Alabama's request to stay a decision striking down that state's ban on same-sex marriage, the Montgomery Advertiser's Brian Lyman reports. The bans include a statute and a constitutional amendment. Now the request for a stay is being pursued to the U.S. Supreme Court. Continue Reading
February 1st, 2015
A bill has been introduced in the California Senate to make it illegal for drones to be flown over private property unless drone operators have the permission of owners, the San Francisco Business Times' Patrick Hoge reports. In another drone-legislative development, a bill has been proposed in Oklahoma to shield anyone from liability if they destroy a drone that flies below 300 feet over their property and encroaches on their... Continue Reading
February 1st, 2015
An Arkansas bill that would have banned the use of drones over private property unless owners gave permission won't be taking off, Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette's Doug Thompson reports. Instead, the bill will be replaced with another bill to amend the state's anti-voyeurism laws. Continue Reading
January 30th, 2015
NPR's Kenya Downs mused in a recent post whether the fight over the propriety of the Washington Redskins' trademark could end up changing this body of law. After years and years of efforts by American Indian activists to have the trademark canceled on the grounds that it is racially offensive and disparaging, petitioners won the cancellation of the trademark and the U.S. Department of Justice also has decided to intervene in the... Continue Reading
January 30th, 2015
There's been an interesting debate going on the Volokh Conspiracy this week on whether there is an originalist case for a right to same-sex marriage (originalism being the theory of constitutional interpretation that the U.S. Constitution should be viewed through the lens of what the public at the time, or, alternatively, what Founding Fathers or the framers of later constitutional amendments, intended about the constitution).... Continue Reading

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