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Does Fair Use Protect Google's Digital Library Project?

The long-running putative class action between Google and the Authors Guild and other content producers over Google's project in which it has digitized over 20 million books was back in federal court yesterday.

Reuters reports that Judge Denny Chin appeared to favor the fair use argument by Google, which is seeking to immunize the claims of copyright infringement brought by the plaintiffs. Chin said that Google's project has helped people get information, including law clerks in his chambers, Reuters reported of the oral argument.

The Second Circuit ruled that Chin prematurely approved class certification for the authors without deciding if the fair use defense applies. While Chin is a circuit judge himself now, he retained jurisdiction, Reuters reported.

 

Legal Troubles Far From Over For JPMorgan

Even though JP Morgan agreed to pay nearly $1 billion in fines for its conduct in the 'London Whale' incident in which the bank’s chief investment officer lost more than $6 billion and then regulators were misled about the losses, the investment bank's legal troubles appear to be far from over. The New York Times' DealB%k Blog reports there is "an unusual wave of scrutiny for JPMorgan, which is now facing investigations from at least seven federal agencies, several state regulators and two foreign nations. The investigations span across the bank. Its mortgage business, debt collection practices and its hiring of the children of well-connected Chinese officials are all under fire in Washington."

Indigenous Rights Cropping Up As Issue in Malaysia

I am always interested in news out of Malaysia as my college roommate is from there.

Here is this report: Indigenous peoples in Malaysia are facing forced displacement and the loss of livelihood due to extractive industries in east Malaysia, Free Malaysia Today reported. The issue was brought up in a session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.  Some Malaysian leaders want James Anaya, the special UN rapporteur on indigenous rights to conduct a mission in their country, Free Malaysia Today also reported.

Separately, a human rights commission has recommended the establishment of a "Native Title Court or Special Court to deal with the backlog of native land rights cases currently in the civil court." That full story is here: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/focus-on-bumiputera-s...

 

Gaps In Media Shield Law Legislation Worry Not Just Opponents

U.S. News and World Report recounted last week that even supporters of passing legislation that would allow journalists to keep their confidential sources shielded admit that the legislation would not address the situation in which the U.S. Department of Justice seized without notice two months of Associated Press phone records. Just today, several outlets are reporting that a former FBI agent was identified in those phone logs and has now agreed to plead guilty to leaking news of a failed 2012 "underwear bomb" plot by al Qaeda, the Wall Street Journal reports: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405270230375960457909362328002599...

Another concern raised about the bill as currently drafted is that it would not provide protection to citizen bloggers. Moreover, an amendment backed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., "intentionally excises WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange from supposed legal protections for journalists," according to U.S. News.

One of the legislative opponents to the bill, Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, told U.S. News in an email: "The extension of the bill's protections to a so-called 'citizen blogger,' a journalist who is not employed by traditional media outlets, is entirely subject to the judge's willingness to exercise discretion, after finding that doing so would be (a) in the interest of justice and (b) necessary to protect lawful and legitimate news-gathering activities. Thus, while for some the privilege is automatic and known in advance, those outside the favored status may only hope that a reviewing federal judge deems them sufficiently worthy of protection."

Second Circuit Recognizes First Amendment Right of Access In Civil Contempt Proceedings

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 09/23/2013 - 20:08

There is a presumptive right under the First Amendment to have access to civil contempt proceedings, the Second Circuit ruled today.

Circuit Court Judge Gerard E. Lynch, writing also for Judges Susan L. Carney and Raymond J. Lohier Jr. on the civil contempt proceedings issue, said the U.S. District Judge Arthur D. Spatt of the Eastern District of New York erred when concluding the First Amendment right for the public to have access to a transcript of civil contempt proceedings was outweighed by the concern that “opening contempt hearings to the public would put district courts in the absurd position of either maintaining the secrecy of the underlying materials or undermining their own protective orders.”

The circuit applied the “experience-and-logic” approach, or whether the documents have historically been open to the press and general public and whether public access plays a significant role in the functioning of the particular process in question.

“Under the experience-and-logic approach, the civil contempt proceedings, which carry the threat of coercive sanctions, implied First Amendment values,” Lynch said. “As we have noted in the related context of the common law right of access, the need for public access to court proceedings is grounded in the ‘need for federal courts … to have a measure of accountability and for the public to have confidence in the administration of justice.’ This observation applies with special force in the context of contempt proceedings, which, although civil in nature, carry the threat of coercive sanctions and seek to enforce the court’s own orders.”

The holding arises out of a case in which a member of the Nassau County Legislature was ordered to pay $2,500 for allegedly revealing aspects of an internal affairs police report on how law enforcement in Nassau County handled the protection from abuse orders entered against a confidential informant who ended up murdering his daughter.

According to the opinion, legislator Peter Schmitt said in a televised editorial that the officers mentioned in the report should be ashamed of themselves because “’mandatory arrests were called for and not performed, giving a cell phone to the prisoner when he was behind bars and allowing him to call the victim 35 to 40 times, and on and on and on,’” according to the main opinion.

Members of the county legislature were allowed to review the report as part of their decision-making on whether to approve a $7.7 million civil settlement in the underlying case, but the legislators were subject to a protective order, the opinion said.

When Schmitt was brought into court to face civil contempt charges, Spatt closed the courtroom for much of the proceeding, including for the testimony of the supervisor of the internal affairs unit that wrote the report.

Three-and-a-half years ago, Sharon Dorsett filed a civil rights lawsuit over the stabbing death of her daughter Jo’Anna Bird at the hands of Leonardo Valdez-Cruz, her ex-boyfriend and Bird’s father, according to the opinion. Despite several orders of protection, Dorsett alleged that “negligently lax supervision resulted [from Nassau County law enforcement] at least in part from Valdez-Cruz’ status as a police informant.”

The Nassau County Police Department’s Internal Affairs Unit produced a 712-page report on the issue, and when Dorsett’s counsel sought to release a redacted version of the report to the press, a preliminary injunction was entered against its release.

Lohier wrote a concurring opinion on the issue of the sealed internal police report. While all three judges agreed that the media-intervenors were not entitled to the report, they had different rationales for reaching that conclusion.

The lead opinion said the district judge erred in relying on a magistrate judge’s finding that there was good cause for a protective order limiting access to the report. But the report was not entered into the record during the contempt hearing, and the report did not get raised to the level of judicial document, Lynch said. There is no First Amendment public right of access to the report if it is not a judicial document, the judge said.

In contrast, Lohier said in a concurrence that the report was a judicial document. But under the logic-and-experience test, the concurring judge said that the report should not be disclosed publicly because internal police investigations are historically not made public and “the public’s interest in scrutinizing the district court’s contempt determination is only very minimally furthered by releasing the report, particularly since the hearing transcript will now be made public.”

Newsday and News 12 Networks intervened in the Newsday v. County of Nassau case.

 

Concerns Raised About Reversal In First-Ever In-Country Genocide Prosecution of Former Leader

When former Guatemala dictator José Efraín Ríos Montt was convicted of crimes including genocide earlier this year, it was the first time a former head of state was prosecuted for genocide in his own country's courts, according to think tank International Crisis Group. But then the Constitutional Court annulled the verdict. ICG is concerned that the verdict was annulled due to political pressure. The case against Ríos Montt and another co-defendant has gone to a new tribunal instead. ICG makes many recommendations in this report, including depoliticizing "the selection process for a new Supreme Court and judges of other appellate tribunals, as well as for re-nominating or choosing a successor for the attorney general. Urgent steps must be taken to ensure that the process is both transparent and inclusive, reflecting the diversity of Guatemala's population, not just the interests of the wealthy and politically powerful."

Opinion: FISA Court Contradicts US Supreme Court's Privacy Jurisprudence

Yochai Benkler, law professor and director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, writes in The Guardian that a ruling in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court contradicts recent jurisprudence from the U.S. Supreme Court on security and the constitutional protection from unreasonable searches and seizures. One of the most important implications of Benkler's argument is for FICA no longer to be an ex parte, completely secret court. Creating a role for an adversary to the goverment's surveillance requests has been one of the key reforms suggested for FISC. Benkler says that if FISC was adversarial that the U.S. Supreme Court's holding in United States v. Jones--that it was unconstitutional for law enforcement to place a GPS tracking device on a suspect's vehicle without a warrant-- would not have been ignored by FISC in a decision setting out "why the government's collection of records of all Americans' phone calls is constitutional."

Objections to Gay Lawyer's Defamation Claim Overruled

The Legal Intelligencer (my journalism alma mater) reports that a Philadelphia judge has overruled preliminary objections to a defamation lawsuit brought by a plaintiffs attorney against a firm that withdrew a job offer to him. The plaintif alleges Raynes McCarty withdrew its job offer to him based on false information it allegedly received from Anapol Schwartz after he had voiced concerns to that firm's leadership over what he believed to be discrimination based on his sexual orientation, The Legal reports.

Editorial: Federal Journalist Shield Law Needed

While acknowledging the criticism that the federal shield bill would not on its face protect citizen-journalists, this Washington Post editorial argues that there is an adequate release valve because the bill "would also empower judges to extend its protections to anyone if they determine that doing so would be 'in the interest of justice and necessary to protect lawful and legitimate news-gathering activities."'

Copyright Battle Over Broadcast Streaming Services Getting Personal Between Rivals?

While streaming TV services Aereo and FilmOn X have a common cause in fighting the boundaries of copyright law and broadcast TV networks' exclusive rights to public performance of their programming, the firms' leaders seem to have have personal animus toward each other - or at least the CEO of FilmOn does after originally calling his firm Aereokiller until sued by Aereo on the name issue. The Verge reports FilmOn's billionaire owner accused Aereo of pursuing denial of service attacks against his firm in a tweet: '"@ckanojia - hey fuckhead, if you keep ddosing FilmOn you are going to pay in more ways than you can imagine.' A second message from David's account followed a few minutes later. 'What you are doing is like breaking into someone's home and smashing their shit up,' the tweet said. 'Fortunately [you] lame fuck, my geeks are smarter.'"

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