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Feds Seek to Dismiss Twitter's First Amendment Lawsuit

The Justice Department is seeking the dismissal of Twitter's lawsuit in which the social-media firm is challenging restrictions on revealing information about national security requests for user data, the Washington Post's Ellen Nakashima reports: "At issue is a letter issued in January 2014 by the Justice Department relaxing limits for companies wishing to disclose the number of such requests they receive. Twitter, which was not among the five firms that negotiated the new limits with the department, thought they were still too strict." The government says that the letter does not restrict Twitter's free expression.

Bus Companies Challenge State's Novel Use of Eminent Domain

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Sun, 01/11/2015 - 13:12

Here's an article I recently did for the Connecticut Law Tribune about a novel lawsuit: can the government take through eminent domain certificates that authorize bus companies to operate on certain routes?

Connecticut is no stranger to landmark eminent domain disputes, with the U.S. Supreme Court having ruled in 2005 that the city of New London could shift from one private owner to another in order to further economic development. Nor is the state Department of Transportation any stranger to such proceedings, as the agency often condemns land to make way for public roads.

Now, the Connecticut Appellate Court or the state Supreme Court is going to hear an apparent issue of first impression in condemnation law: can the Department of Transportation use its eminent domain power to take intangible property? In this case, can it withdraw certificates that authorize four bus companies to operate on certain routes?

The state wants to take away certificates for Collins Bus Service Inc., Dattco Inc., Nason Partners Inc., and the New Britain Transportation Co. for routes between Hartford and nearby towns. The court action preceeds the planned opening of the Harford-New Britain busway by just a few months, but state officials say the intent is not to eliminate competition for the busway but to allow competitive bidding for routes used by the four companies.

Counsel for DOT Commissioner James Redeker have successfully argued in Superior Court that the agency has the power to condemn "certificates of public convenience and necessity" that permit private bus companies to operate in certain parts of the state. The bus companies have lodged an appeal with the Appellate Court. Because the ruling would set precedent, the companies have asked the Supreme Court to directly take the case.

Under state law, the DOT can only take "land, buildings, equipment and facilities" under its eminent domain power. Since there is no definition for "facilities" in Chapter 242 of the General Statutes, Judge Trial Referee Joseph Shortall recently cited a 1942 decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit noting that "facilities" is an inclusive term "'embracing anything which aids or makes easier the performance of the activities involved in the business of a person or corporation."'

Shortall also cited a definition of facility from Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary as "'something that makes an action, operation or course of conduct easier."'

As a result, Shortall said, in applying the dictionary definition of facility, that the bus certificates qualify as "facilities" that the DOT commissioner is entitled to condemn so long as it will be in the public interest. "Not only do they make the companies' activities in operating a bus service easier; they are essential to those operations," Shortall wrote.

State Control?

Jeffrey Mirman, a partner at Hinckley, Allen & Snyder and counsel for the four bus companies, said that there is "no language in any statute that would suggest that facilities ever have been to held to encompass intangible rights like franchises or certificates."

The bus companies are fighting the use of eminent domain to take their certificates because "ultimately, we believe that the state wants all bus service to be controlled and operated by the state with no private companies" in the municipal transportation sector, Mirman said.

Once the certificates are issued, the government only can only revoke them for "sufficient cause," Mirman argued.

Assistant Attorneys General Alan Ponanski and Charles Walsh said in court papers that the bus companies want the Connecticut judiciary to "declare that the the commissioner lacks the authority to take their certificates … Rather than allow the commissioner to implement legislative policy to develop and improve mass transportation series by taking the certificates and competitively procuring bus service at the best price for the Connecticut taxpayers over the routes covered by those certificates, the bus companies want this court to tie the commissioner's hands and require him to contract with them and subsidize their services infinitely into the future."

Shortall added that interpreting the statute otherwise would limit the DOT's ability to implement the busway. "As long as the companies' franchises remained in their hands, they would continue to hold the exclusive right to provide bus service over the routes in question," he stated.

The court cited two cases from other jurisdictions on whether the term "facilities" in the field of eminent domain law includes the exclusive right to provide services held by a utility company. The Mississippi Supreme Court addressed the issue in a 1973 case and the Tennessee Court of Appeals addressed it in a 1990 case.

Mirman said he thinks the "trial court recognized the decision was a toss-up and could have gone the either way" by permitting a temporary injunction to stay in place until the Appellate or Supreme court can take up the case.

IRS Can't Keep Up With Tax-Exempt Charities

The Washington Post's Josh Hicks reports that "an independent review released last month faulted the IRS for scant oversight of charities, saying the agency examined the groups less frequently while its budget and workforce steadily shrank in recent years." The Government Accountability Office found that the IRS audited 0.7 percent of charities in 2013, down from 0.81 percent in 2011. The GAO also said the the IRS has not developed a system to measure the outcome of its scant oversight.

Ecoterrorist Conviction Thrown Out Over Withheld Evidence

Eric Taylor McDavid has had his convictions for being a radical, domestic ecoterrorist thrown because thousands of pages of evidence were not turned over by federal prosecutors to his defense counsel, the Sacramento Bee reports. McDavid allegedly plotted to bomb or torch the Nimbus Dam, a U.S. Forest Service lab and cellphone towers in the Sacramento region. McDavid's lawyers said he fell for a FBI informant "who later prodded him to take violent action against government targets with promises that they would later consummate a romantic relationship, and the informant entrapped him by providing money, housing and food to McDavid and his two codefendants.

Ohio Changes Drug Cocktail for Executions

The Associated Press reports that Ohio is changing the two-drug cocktail it uses in executions after it was administered to an "inmate who repeatedly gasped and snorted during a troubling 26-minute execution."  The inmate's children are suing the state, arguing their father endured needless pain and suffering.

Instead, the state is going to use thiopental sodium, but that drug is no longer readily available in the United States.

Connecticut, Georgia Mull Drone Legislation

Connecticut and Georgia legislators are mulling drone legislation, The Plainville Citizen's Eric Vo and 13WMAZ 's Lorra Lynch Jones reports.

In Connecticut, "in December, the Program Review and Investigations Committee recommended limiting drone use for law enforcement in the absence of reasonable suspicion of criminal activity or a search warrant. The panel also recommended prohibiting remote operation of weapons including government and non-government drones and that all state and local government drones be registered with the Office of Policy and Management," Vo reports.

In Georgia, House Bill 5 has been introduced, spelling "out when and where researchers, law enforcement and private citizens can use drones, when they can capture images, and the bill would make breaking the law a misdemeanor, punishable by fines," Lynch Jones reports.

 

 

 

Nebraska Supreme Court Ships Keystone XL Decision to President Obama

The controversy of the Keystone XL oil pipeline project is now in the hands of President Barack Obama after a Nebraska Supreme Court ruling on Friday, which threw out a legal challenge to the pipeline, the Associated Press' Josh Lederman reports. The Congressional Republicans also have kicked the project over to the president with the House having passed and the Senate close to passing legislation to authorize construction of the pipeline that would carry more than 800,000 barrels of crude oil a day from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries. However, Lederman reports "Obama has said he will only allow the pipeline if it won't lead to increased carbon dioxide emissions. He also is skeptical of claims by supporters that the pipeline will create jobs or lessen U.S. dependence on foreign oil."

5th Circuit Offers Cool Reception to Same-Sex Marriage Bans

Same-sex marriage bans in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi got a cool reception during oral arguments before the 5th Circuit yesterday, Bloomberg's Daniel Lawton and Andrew Harris reports. A Louisiana judge upheld that state's ban, while Texas and Mississippi judges rejected bans on same-sex marriage in their states. Having listened to a recording of the arguments involving Louisiana so far, the judges indeed were very skeptical of the government's arguments in favor of keeping that state's ban intact.

FDA to Expand Electronic Health Records Pilot to Track Product Safety

According to a report in iHealthBeat, the Food and Drug Administration is going to expand a pilot that is using electronic health records, as well as claims data, to monitor the safety of medical devices the agency regulates: "Specifically, FDA said the [Mini-Sentinel] system can examine: More than 350 million person years of observation; Four billion pharmaceutical dispensings; and 4.1 billion patient meetings." Now, the pilot is being rolled out on a full scale.

#CharlieHebdo Shooting Should Encourage, Not Repress Civil Liberties

Judy Dempsey, writing for Carnegie Europe, argues that, in the wake of a dozen people being killed at French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, European governments should be encouraged "to protect press freedom and other civil liberties, not restrict them.": "Freedom of the press is inextricably tied to universal values and is not an exclusively Western liberty. To curb that freedom now, and for anti-Islam movements at the same time to use the attacks on Charlie Hebdo to incite hatred against Muslims, would undermine the civil liberties and tolerance espoused by the West."

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