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Will Right to Be Forgotten Spread to the US?

The New York Times' Farhad Manjoo writes that the right to be forgotten--or, more specifically, the right requiring search engines to erase the online search results about European citizens in favor of their privacy--could spread to the United States. For example, a French regulator has ruled that all of Google's sites, including American versions, should grant the right to be forgotten on Google sites that are not country specific.

The United States and Europe, which have consensus on what constitutes copyrighted content, do not have the same consensus on what should be private information, Manjoo writes. But the law on which the right to be forgotten in Europe is based has no territorial restrictions.

PA Supreme Court to Examine Civil Forfeiture Issues

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has taken a case that will examine that state's civil forfeiture procedures, The Legal Intelligencer's Lizzy McLellan reports. The case involves the seizure of a Philadelphia woman's home and vehicle that were seized because her son sold marijuana out of her home.

The issue of asset forfeiture is heating up with federal cases also challenging the Philadelphia district attorney's procedures regarding asset forfeitures in drug-dealing cases. Critics say there is a conflict of interest because prosecutors get to keep the money earned from forfeitures in order to fund law enforcement activities.

UN Secretary-General: Improvement of Health Needed for Indigenous Peoples

Yesterday was the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples, which was focused on the health of indigenous peoples, their access to health services and gaps in social services.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which was adopted in 2007, "'affirms the right to maintain indigenous health practices as well as to have access to all social and health services for the enjoyment of the highest standards of physical and mental health,"' Merh News Agency reports.

Inter Press Service's Aruna Dutt reports that climate change could have a disproportionate impact on the health of indigenous peoples because of their "'dependence upon and close relationship with the environment and its resources.'"

Court Rules Reporter Had Right to Stay Quiet On Source

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently ruled that a reporter didn't have to disclose the identity of a confidential source for  a 2004 story about a federal ethics investigation into a former U.S. attorney, MLive's Khalil AlHajal reports.

David Ashenfelter, who at the time was a reporter for the Detroit Free Press, wrote a story about how then-Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Convertino handled a terrorism case in which the two defendants later had their convictions overturned. Convertino has pursued a Privacy Act Claim, claiming he was punished by the leak about the federal ethics investigation into him.

When Ashenfelter was deposed in Convertino's suit, Ashenfelter asserted a Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination. The Sixth Circuit agreed that he couldn't be compelled to expose his confidential sources due to '"the possibility of prosecution."'

Delaware Losing Luster as Corporate Haven

Companies including Dole and Ancestry.com are souring on Delaware as the place of their incorporation, The Wall Street Journal's Liz Hoffman reports: "Dole is one of several companies that say the state has become less hospitable toward business. Among their gripes: a growing tide of shareholder litigation, which some feel the state hasn’t done enough to curb. One new measure bars companies from shifting their legal fees to shareholders who sue and lose—a boon to would-be plaintiffs."

One of the main complaints from Dole and Ancestry.com is against appraisal suits, which require companies to pay interest on the value of all claims disputing the price paid.

Delaware is the legal home to 54 percent of public companies, and the Delaware Court of Chancery has had its filings increase by 20 percent between 2003 and 2012, the WSJ reports.

Judge Overturns Idaho's Ag Gag Ban on Surveillance Inside Factory Farms

Idaho's "ag gag" law banning undercover surveillance inside of agricultural operations has been ruled unconstitutional, The Guardian's Rory Carroll reports. U.S. District Judge B Lynn Winmill ruled the ban violates the constitutional right to free speech and to equal protection: "'An agricultural facility’s operations that affect food and worker safety are not exclusively a private matter. Food and worker safety are matters of public concern.”'

Winmill also ruled that the Idaho statute violated the constitutional protection for equal protection under the law because it was motivated by animus toward animal rights activists.

NAACP Wants Investigation Into Black Attorney's Death

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 07/27/2015 - 10:37

Here's a piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about the mysterious death of a black attorney and the NAACP's call for further investigation into his death:

Abe Dabela was 35 years old and life seemed to be going well. He had come to the legal profession late, after a series of jobs in the health care industry, and had recently completed a stint as an associate at a major law firm. He loved riding motorcycles and was passionate about health care, social justice and the Second Amendment.

But the Redding Police and the state medical examiner's office say he took his own life on April 5, 2014. Now the Connecticut NAACP, along with Dabela's family, are calling for an investigation into whether the Ethiopian-American attorney was actually murdered.

Here is the police version of events: Gugsa Abraham "Abe" Dabela was only a few minutes from his house in upscale Redding when he flipped his SUV while going around the curve. The vehicle was found at about 1:40 a.m. Dabela had been shot once in the head. A semi-automatic handgun was found in the vehicle.

Scot X. Esdaile, president of the Connecticut NAACP, said in an interview that the civil rights organization plans to put together a team of former law enforcement officers and attorneys to conduct its own investigation. He emphasized that the NAACP has not reached any conclusions about Dabela's death. But he also said there have been many instances where a black men was lynched or murdered as part of a hate crime and authorities have called the death a "suicide."

America has a "long deep-rooted history of blacks being found dead at the side of the road by racist people," said Esdaile, who noted that Redding is 95 percent white.

"Right now, the country is really, really on a cutting edge with racial politics," Esdaile said. "Here we are in Connecticut with a situation that is very mysterious. … It's the duty of the NAACP to make sure things are handled right and in accordance with the laws of this country."

Dabela's family has listed several questions about the Redding Police Department's investigation: Why wasn't a bullet found in the car? Did Dabela's political views in favor of gun rights and his dealings with Redding police to obtain a gun-carry permit negatively influence the investigation into his death? Why, according to a statement by the family, has "Redding exhibited such indolence and apathy for the last 15 months, despite state crime lab reports that suggest this was potentially a homicide?"

Dabela's sister, Albab Dabela, also is an attorney. Family members have declined to speak to the media.

Redding Police Chief Doug Fuchs said in a statement that investigators from his department spent hundreds or hours investigating the attorney's death, and their work has been reviewed by the Connecticut State Police Major Crimes Unit and others, and no one has yet to refute their work. The Danbury News-Times reported that Dabela, when applying for a pistol permit in 2013 with the Redding police, thanked Redding officers for their "service and professionalism" in an email.

Fuchs did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

Dabela's family and the NAACP are planning a news conference in front of the police department on Aug. 5 to further press the issue.

Darnell D. Crossland, president of the Norwalk branch of the Connecticut NAACP and a Stamford-based attorney, said the news conference is being held to address the concerns of Dabela's family and "in light of the fact that there are so many unanswered questions" about Dabela's death.

According to postings on a motorcycle rider website, DCSportsbike.com, Dabela went to high school in Bethesda, Maryland. On his LinkedIn page, Dabela said he graduated from the University of Maryland and then obtained a master's in public health from Drexel University in Philadelphia, where he wrote about the problem of Americans without health insurance in the years immediately before the passage of the Affordable Care Act.

He then spent the next few years working mostly in health care-related jobs, ranging from outreach coordinator at the Philadelphia Department of Public Health to assistant operations manager of a Maryland nursing home.

Dabela attended the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York City, participating in the school's securities arbitration clinic and interning at the New York City firm of Schiff Hardin. He received his J.D. in 2011 and was admitted to the Connecticut bar in 2012.

Dabela was hired as an associate in Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker's Stamford office, where his practice included alternative dispute resolution, product liability, commercial contracts, insurance coverage and professional liability. The firm did not respond to calls seeking comment.

After working with Wilson Elser for two years, Dabela formally established his own firm in Redding about one month before he was killed.

He also provided pro bono legal advice about Second Amendment rights, some of it coming on online forums such as OpenCarry.org.

After his death, a funeral service for Dabela was held in the Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist Church in Washington, D.C. The service was announced on the DCSportsBike website, on which Dabela was often affectionately referred to known as "Googs."

"Abe was a great friend to this community and a valued subject matter expert on legal issues," wrote one poster. "He was always willing to give his advice free of charge, which is an uncharacteristic trait for any lawyer. He was also a true champion of the Second Amendment. I can't quantify how much I have learned from him. … He was a loyal friend and an avid rider. We lost a good one."

Do Uncontacted Tribes Have the Right to Be Left Alone?

A remote tribe living in the Amazon jungle is about to be contacted by outsiders from the Peruvian government for the first time, The Washington Post's Ishaan Tharoor reports. The Mascho Piro people are not the first tribe to have existed "almost entirely outside the purview of the nation-states in which they technically live."

Critics says that contact with outsiders could cause many members of the Mascho Piro people to die from outside diseases, but a Peruvian official working on state tribal affairs told Reuters it appears they have been trying to make some sort of contact, including appearing on the banks of an Amazonian tributary and demanding rope, machetes and bananas.

Academics suggest that the best path forward is controlled contact with indigenous groups, "carefully managed to avoid the spread of disease, but also enable the building of trust and providing aid and medical help if needed," Tharoor reports.

Lawsuit Accuses Police of Touching Private Parts During Pat Downs

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 07/21/2015 - 21:07

Here's a piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about a lawsuit alleging a police officer in Connecticut went too far when stopping two black men:

When two black brothers were pulled over by a cop in the city of New London, the officer frisked them both, allegedly touching their genitals and their buttocks. When one of them protested and turned around during the pat down, he was arrested for interfering with the police officer.

Now four years later after that October 2011 traffic stop, U.S. District Judge Janet C. Hall has ruled that there is enough evidence to to go to trial on the allegations that what happened to Donald Gilbert, the driver of the vehicle pulled over by Officer Roger Newton, and Andre Gilbert, the passenger in his brother's vehicle, were part of policy by New London police to arbitrarily stop motor vehicles and arbitrarily arrest people.

Hall found that the two brothers' case could survive summary judgment because they have produced evidence of several New London residents complaining of how they were treated by police during traffic stops and that their cars were searched without any justifiable legal reason. Newton also is being sued individually.

Donald Gilbert complained that Newton had touched him inappropriately during a search in May 2010—almost a year-and-a-half before his brother and he were pulled over and allegedly molested by Newton. Another man also alleged that a different officer, when stopping him while he was driving in New London in 2014, "put his hand underneath my crotch and squeezed my testicles." The plaintiffs also argued that the video of the stop by the two Gilbert brothers has been used by state prosecutors to train the police officers in New London how not to do pat downs.

"A reasonable jury could find that New London was deliberately indifferent to its officers' practice of making traffic stops without reasonable suspicion of any wrongdoing, following such traffic stops with overzealous (to put it gently) pat-down searches, and searching citizens' cars without a legal basis for doing so," Hall opined.

The issue of law enforcement stopping minorities without reasonable suspicion and arresting them without probable cause has come into the national limelight after the U.S. Department of Justice found that racial bias was endemic in how the Ferguson Police Department in Missouri treated black residents. The issue previously arose in Connecticut, where East Haven police were accused of profiling Latino drivers for traffic stops and subsequent arrents. Those allegations led to federal investigations, criminal prosecutions and civil lawsuits.

In Newton's affidavit filed with the police department about the 2010 stop, he stated he had been sitting in his parked car talking on his cell phone. But Newton had him step out of the car to be frisked and "'patted me down twice sticking his fingers in my a-- … I do not believe that the officer had the right to violate me."'

New London Captain Steven Crowley said that Newton had gone over the line in the 2010 incident, even though Newton said he thought Gilbert might be involved in drug-dealing. "If [Gilbert] had consented to the initial actions, he clearly had made his feeling well know during the pat down that he was not comfortable with being touched by Newton," Crowley concluded, according to court papers.

In an interview, Newton's counsel, Elliot B. Spector of Hassett & George, said that his client recognized the Gilberts as "well-known drug dealers" and that it is known that people can conceal weapons near their private parts.

When the case goes to the jury, it will be an issue of whether it was reasonable for Newton to conduct the patdowns on the Gilberts in the way he did, Spector said. And whether it was reasonable will be "left to an issue of credibility," he said

The plaintiffs also showed that the New London deputy police chief, when reviewing another man's complaint against Newton, said "the enforcement of seemingly minor motor vehicle offenses is a proven tool in the efforts to curb crime and [drug] trafficking."

New London officials acknowledged providing training to Newton about the legal basis for using force, stopping motor vehicles and search and seizure. The city said it had no knowledge that there was any practice by its police officers of conducting arbitrary motor vehicle stops or arbitrarily arresting people without probable cause.

Hall also said that the plaintiffs are entitled to damages if they can prove at trial that their state constitutional rights to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and to not be arrested unless "clearly warranted by law" were violated.

The federal judge rejected a ruling by the Connecticut Appellate Court that only "egregious" violations of people's rights under the state Constitution are compensable. She noted that federal judges in Connecticut have been of different minds on whether the Connecticut Supreme Court's 1998 ruling in Binette v. Sabo means that citizens can sue for money damages every time their rights to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures and illegal arrests are violated.

Hall predicted that the Connecticut Supreme Court would rule that all constitutional violations "give rise to a private cause of action, whether the offending conduct is egregious or merely unreasonable."

Discovery has closed in the case, and the judge said that the Gilberts' counsel did not produce enough evidence that they were being racially profiled or that the police department intentionally discriminates against minorities.

Spector said there was no evidence of discriminatory motivation by his client and he is gratified that claim was dismissed. Newton has moved out of state and is longer with the police department, Spector said.

The brother who was arrested by Newton with interfering with an officer had that charge nolled.

John W. Cannavino Jr. and Jonathan C. Zellner, of Ryan Ryan Deluca, in Stamford are representing the city. Cannavino declined comment. The Gilberts are being represented by Conrad O. Seifert, of Seifert & Hogan in Old Lyme. Seifert declined comment.

Second Circuit Rules Citizenship Law Discriminates Against Fathers

Earlier this month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that an immigration law that treats mothers and fathers differently in determining whether their children may claim U.S. citizenship is unconstitutional, Reuters' Joseph Ax reports.

The law requires unwed fathers who are U.S. citizens to spend at least five years residing in the U.S. before they can confer citizenship to children born out of country, out of wedlock and to a mother who is not a U.S. citizen. In contrast, unwed U.S. mothers only must reside in the U.S. for a year for their children to be able to obtain American citizenship.

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