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U.S. Supreme Court Hears Arguments in Casino Case That Could Shape American Indian Tribal Rights

The Guardian reports on U.S. Supreme Court oral arguments today in a case in which the state of Michigan argues that the Bay Mills Indian Community inappropriately opened an off-reservation casino without authorization of the federal government and in violation of a state agreement. Some of the justices took a skeptical view of the position that tribal sovereignity gives extra protection against closing the casino or other action by Michigan. Justice Stephen Breyer, for one, said, "My belief is Indian tribes all over the country, operate businesses off the reservation, and businesses all over the country are regulated. And does the State, I guess, in your view not have the power to enforce the regulation against the Indian tribe?" The Guardian reported.

CT Prosecutor Ends Fight to Block Disclosure of Sandy Hook 911 Calls to Associated Press

The Associated Press reports that prosecutor State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky III announced today he will no longer fight against the disclosure of 911 calls made as Adam Lanza shot schoolchildren and school officials at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Last week, Sedensky was ordered by a trial judge to release the 911 calls to the Associated Press. The AP says it wants to review the recordings, in part, to scrutinize the law enforcement response to the mass shooting.

Former Attorney General Warns Against Media Shield Law

Michael Mukasey, who served as attorney general under former President George W. Bush, is arguing against a bill pending in the U.S. Senate that would allow reporters to protect their confidential sources in most instances, The Wall Street Journal reports. Mukasey argues the bill is '"fraught with near-meaningless amibiguity'" on who would be covered journalists and that the bill would give judges too much power to decide "whether the disclosure of the information would be contrary to the public interest and thus not protected," The Journal also reports.

Obama Administration has made 'most concerted effort at least since the plumbers and the enemies lists of the Nixon Administration to intimidate officials in Washington from ever talking to a reporter'

Last week, ProPublica founder and executive chairman Paul Steiger received the Burton Benjamin Memorial award from the Committee to Protect Journalists. In his remarks, Steiger said that President Barack Obama's administration has been the most dangerous president for the First Amendment since President Richard Nixon: "For the starkest comparison, I urge any of you who haven’t already done so to read last month’s report, commissioned by CPJ and written by Len Downie, former editor of the Washington Post. It lays out in chilling detail how an administration that took office promising to be the most transparent in history instead has carried out the most intrusive surveillance of reporters ever attempted. It also has made the most concerted effort at least since the plumbers and the enemies lists of the Nixon Administration to intimidate officials in Washington from ever talking to a reporter."

 

most concerted effort at least since the plumbers and the enemies lists of the Nixon Administration to intimidate officials in Washington from ever talking to a reporter.

Connecticut, Louisiana, South Dakota and Delaware Only Four States Without Drone Laws

Drones are and up-and-coming technology as evidenced by Amazon's plan to use drones to deliver orders. While the Federal Aviation Administration has not started regulating drones yet, states have started regulating them, according to The Hartford Courtant. But The Courant reports that Connecticut and three other states are the only ones in the country with laws that are completely silent on drones.

Media Companies Seek Access to Surveilliance Court Decisions

Gigaom reports on a petition filed by several major media companies, including The New York Times, Politico and Bloomberg, against the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court decision that the Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic at Yale Law School does not have standing to seek access to the court's decisions authorizing the National Security Agency to collect millions of phone and e-mail records. Among other arguments, Gigaom reports "the media companies also point out that they have fewer resources to defend free speech and civil liberties issues in court, and must rely on newer groups like the Yale law clinic to help lift a legal torch they carried for most of the 20th century: 'while [the media companies] feel that news of their ‘death’ has been greatly exaggerated, shrinking budgets at large media companies have inevitably meant a drop-off in First Amendment litigation from those outlets.'"

Croatia Adopts Constitutional Ban On Same-Sex Marriage

Almost two-thirds of Croatian voters approved a change to their constitution to define marriage as a "union of a man and woman," Voice of America reports. The move was initiated by Roman Catholic groups and "90 percent of the population of 4.4 million say they are Catholic," according to Voice of America.  Turnout was 37 percent, Voice of America also reports.

Professors Draws Lessons From Developing Countries For Tax Reform in the United States

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 12/02/2013 - 08:34

I wrote a piece for The Connecticut Law Tribune on a law professor who has gone from reforming tax codes in China, Zambia, Vietnam and Gambia to proposing changes to how taxes are divided between states in which multistate corporations do business.

A story excerpt:

Richard Pomp has drafted tax codes in China, Zambia, Vietnam and Gambia.

One lesson he learned as an academic consultant is that it's a good idea to get the business community invested in the new tax rules. Another lesson is that a smaller country's taxing powers more closely parallels the circumstances in a state like Connecticut than in a big country like the United States.

A developing country "can't control its environment, [is] really at the mercy of forces outside of its control, [is] outgunned and outmanned" by the law firms and accounting firms hired by global corporations, said Pomp, a professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law.

Because a state government faces similar challenges, Pomp decided to parlay his international tax work into studies of state taxation. He was interested in how state governments with their modest powers figure out how to fairly tax businesses that operate in their jurisdiction and in many others as well.

The professor's expertise in state taxation has proved useful as he spent 383 hours on a pro bono project as the hearing officer for the Multistate Tax Commission on proposed changes to the Multistate Tax Compact.

The compact was developed after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could tax interstate commerce through state income taxes. The commission is the administrative arm of the compact.

It was a national, non-partisan association known as the Uniform Law Commission that first came up with a way to fairly divide the taxable income for multistate corporations among the states in which those corporations do business. That model law, the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act, was developed in 1957.

According to Pomp, the act provided the states with a fair way to tax multistate corporations by using a formula based on what percentage of its property, payroll dollars and sales totals that a corporation has within any single state's borders. (Connecticut never bought into the act, Pomp said. Instead, it bases its taxes on a single factor—the percentage of a company's sales that come from Connecticut.)

However, Pomp said, the taxing model has become antiquated over the last half century, with the economic shift away from manufacturing and toward service industries, as well as the development of the Internet and the digitalization of what used to be tangible property.

As a result, many states have moved away from the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act, and have adopted their own tax-computing formulas, often for the purpose of economic development and attracting business to their states. "As the economy gets more complicated, everyone realizes that this model act that goes back to 1957 is hardly a model anymore," Pomp says.

When the Uniform Law Commission decided against updating the model law, the Multistate Tax Commission decided to step into the breach. Pomp's report to the commission suggests changing the formula for taxing multistate businesses by allowing each state to weigh the factors of sales, payroll and property however it chooses. He does, however, suggest giving the percentage of sales a company has in a state twice the weight of the other factors.

The Multistate Tax Commission's executive committee is slated to debate Pomp's report on Dec. 12. Pomp said he hopes that some of his suggestions will provide food for thought even though he proposed changes to the commission's own recommendations. Shirley Sicilian, general counsel for the Multistate Tax Commission, said during a recent press conference on Pomp's report that the goal of the model revisions is to provide something for state legislatures to draw on as they modernize their own tax laws.

Texas Supreme Court Considers Outing Anonymous Blogger

The Texas Supreme Court heard oral argument on whether a blogger who has criticized an Ohio-based company should be unmasked by court order, the Associated Press reported. The blogger's attorney argued that Texas courts don't have personal jurisdiction over the blogger, while the company's attorney argues that Texas does have jurisdiction because its CEO owns a home in Houston and the company has its largest Texas office in Houston. During oral argument, Chief Justice Nathan Hecht questioned if Texas should "be concerned that its courts can be used to investigate any cause of action that could be brought anywhere in the United States. Why should Texas courts just be sort of the State Bureau of Investigation?" according to the AP.

Fighting For Same-Sex Divorce To Avoid Legal Limbos

The flip side of the national movement to establish same-sex marriage in the United States is the right to dissolve same-sex unions. The Associated Press reports on how estranged couples in "nonrecognition states would have to move back to the state where they were married and establish residency in order to get divorced — an option that can be unworkable in many cases."

James Esseks, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, told the AP that the right to end marriage is just as important as the right to enter them. '"Part of that system is creating a predictable, regularized way of dealing with the reality that relationships sometimes end,' [Esseks] said. 'Those are the times people are the worst to each other, and that's why we have divorce courts. There's got to be an adult in the room."'

The AP further profiles a Mississippi case in which that state's Attorney General's office filed a motion to intervene because a same-sex couple married in California is seeking to have a divorce recognized by Mississippi's family courts.

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