Texas Would Rather Ban All Chaplains from Execution Chambers Than Placate One Buddhist Inmate in His Final Moments
Equal treatment under the law can mean everyone is treated equally poorly
Equal treatment under the law can mean everyone is treated equally poorly
Journalists would be expected to pay up for government records, while handing over their own records to government officials for free.
"There is simply not enough information...to confirm that the protestors' conduct, taken as a whole, constituted unprotected disruption."
Since I've been blogging today about public rights of access to sealed files, I thought I'd pass this along.
Facebook and the end of the open Internet era
The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 last night to grant Patrick Murphy's petition for a stay.
Plus: Senators move to end warrantless NSA spying and the "Paycheck Fairness Act" passes the House.
Students have the right to complain about school.
The president signed an executive order supporting free speech on college campuses.
"It is the policy of the federal government to encourage institutions to foster environments that promote open, intellectually engaging, and diverse debate."
Press release from Jersey senator asks Twitter to censor specific user @ivanthetroll12.
Plus: SCOTUS declines Hawaii lesbian case, UC stands by professor in free speech standoff, and ACLU warns of "privacy Trojan horse."
Joshua Clover has a First Amendment right to say horrible things about the police.
The "equal time" rule does not mean what the president thinks it means.
Arlington County's free-speech-trampling sign code forbids businesses from depicting the goods they sell on exterior murals.
Q&A with the co-founder of Institute for Justice about immigration, his legal philosophy, his battles with Sheriff Joe Arpaio, and that tattoo.
Federal judge's ruling in a fair-use lawsuit "is a big win for the First Amendment."
Both sides agree to stand down. First Amendment precedents were on the baker's side.
Police allegedly shoved a photographer to the ground with a baton as well.
"The Sandmanns would never accept half of a half-measure from an organization that still refuses to own up to its error."
Reformers always have a new scheme to take "the money out of politics," but it usually just makes the government larger and campaign spending increase.
Posting a recording of the interaction to the internet would be illegal, the marshal said.
A teenager wrongly accused of harassing a Native American activist sues The Washington Post for $250 million.
Sex, publishing, and quasi-legal theft collide in the Backpage prosecution.
Thomas thinks the Supreme Court may have erred in its 1964 NYT v. Sullivan ruling.
Episode 2 of Free Speech Rules by UCLA Law Professor Eugene Volokh
Jessica Rosenworcel overlooks the statutory and constitutional obstacles to her plan.
As the lawsuit against FOSTA hits appeals court, three essays about the law that everyone should read.
The decision rejects driver's licenses labeled "CRIMINAL SEX OFFENDER" and a broad demand for reports on internet use.
The Michelle Carter case has troubling free speech implications.
Plus: Nancy Pelosi on the "Green New Deal"; John Boehner, cannabis lobbyist
The Alabama prison allows a Christian chaplain in the execution chamber to pray with death row inmates, but it refused to let an imam inside.
The University of Iowa revoked credentials from Business Leaders in Christ for setting sex and marriage requirements for its leaders.
The state can't scrub gun manufacturing info from the internet, so they're trying to make distributing it a crime--First Amendment be damned.
"PCC Public Safety was made aware of a possible planned disruption to tonight's event."
Gun buyers, gay lovers, cannabis customers, and Yelp users are just a few of the groups that benefit from this federal law.
The conservative justices listed a key factor preventing them from hearing the case.
A shortsighted decision that makes little sense.
Yes, the paranoid lunatic is a mega-troll, but the beauty of new media means never having to engage stuff you find awful or offensive.
Popular video game should prevail in lawsuit over its depiction of the infamous detective agency.
The bureaucracy-beleagured beermakers are suing the feds.
The Cato Institute and Institute for Justice team up to fight for the right to publish a book attacking behavior by the SEC.
Only if you like the cause they serve, according to supporters of laws that target the anti-Israel BDS movement
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education collects a 13th victory.
Defense Distributed and the Second Amendment Foundation insist that law violates the First Amendment, Commerce Clause, and Supremacy Clause.
Even if the Oregon Board of Examiners for Engineering and Land Surveying disagrees.
She was expelled and filed a federal suit. Texas' attorney general ignored the Constitution and defended the school.