Tag Archives: Violated

White House coerced tech giants, violated free speech, court rules – USA TODAY

  1. White House coerced tech giants, violated free speech, court rules USA TODAY
  2. Appeals Court Rules White House Overstepped 1st Amendment on Social Media The New York Times
  3. Appeals court says Biden admin likely violated First Amendment but narrows order blocking officials from communicating with social media companies CNN
  4. Biden Administration’s Policing of Online Content Likely Violated Free-Speech Rights, Court Rules The Wall Street Journal
  5. Biden administration violated First Amendment over COVID-19 content on social media, court of appeals rules Fox News
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Appeals court says Biden admin likely violated First Amendment but narrows order blocking officials from communicating with social media companies – CNN

  1. Appeals court says Biden admin likely violated First Amendment but narrows order blocking officials from communicating with social media companies CNN
  2. Appeals Court Rules White House Overstepped 1st Amendment on Social Media The New York Times
  3. 5th Circuit rules Biden administration violated First Amendment The Washington Post
  4. Appeals court scales back order squelching Biden administration contact with social media platforms ABC News
  5. Biden administration violated First Amendment over COVID-19 content on social media, court of appeals rules Fox News
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Attorneys: Akron police violated protesters’ rights – WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

  1. Attorneys: Akron police violated protesters’ rights WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  2. Jayland Walker protests in Akron: Complaint filed to seek restraining order after authorities use pepper spray to disperse demonstrators WKYC.com
  3. Akron businesses raise money to bail out those arrested during Jayland Walker protests cleveland.com
  4. Federal lawsuit filed against City of Akron for use of excessive force during Jayland Walker protests Cleveland 19 News
  5. ‘I was fearful for my life’: Interviews of Akron officers in Jayland Walker case WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
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Monster Energy Claimed the Pokémon Games Violated Its Trademark – Gizmodo

  1. Monster Energy Claimed the Pokémon Games Violated Its Trademark Gizmodo
  2. Monster Energy Drinks once tried suing Capcom and The Pokémon Company but the complaint couldn’t be more bizarre EventHubs
  3. WTF? Monster Energy sues Capcom and Pokémon for use of the word “Monster” Gizchina.com
  4. Pokémon and Monster Hunter Named in Trademark Complaint Filed by Monster Energy CBR – Comic Book Resources
  5. Monster Energy Legal Complaints Included Pokemon and Monster Hunter Franchises GameRant
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Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment – USA TODAY

  1. Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment USA TODAY
  2. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  3. Supreme Court rebuffs Florida city’s challenge to atheist lawsuit KSL.com
  4. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, saying everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  5. Supreme Court declines to hear Florida city’s challenge to atheists The Hill
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Read: AOC may have violated House “impermissible gifts” rule at 2021 Met Gala, watchdog says – Axios

  1. Read: AOC may have violated House “impermissible gifts” rule at 2021 Met Gala, watchdog says Axios
  2. AOC faces House ethics probe over Met Gala, watchdog finds ‘substantial reason to believe’ violations occurred Fox News
  3. AOC paid for Met Gala outfit after House opened ethics probe: report Business Insider
  4. AOC Likely Violated Ethics Rules in Accepting ‘Tax the Rich’ Met Gala Dress, Congressional Watchdog Finds Yahoo News
  5. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Under House Scrutiny for Met Gala Participation The Wall Street Journal
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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez might have violated House rules with Met Gala gifts, watchdog says – USA TODAY

  1. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez might have violated House rules with Met Gala gifts, watchdog says USA TODAY
  2. AOC faces House ethics probe over Met Gala, watchdog finds ‘substantial reason to believe’ violations occurred Fox News
  3. AOC paid for Met Gala outfit after House opened ethics probe: report Business Insider
  4. AOC Likely Violated Ethics Rules in Accepting ‘Tax the Rich’ Met Gala Dress, Congressional Watchdog Finds Yahoo News
  5. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Under House Scrutiny for Met Gala Participation The Wall Street Journal
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Federal judge finds DeSantis violated Florida Constitution but dismisses lawsuit

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A federal judge ruled Friday that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis violated the state’s Constitution when he suspended an elected, progressive-minded state prosecutor but concluded that the law ultimately allows the decision to oust him to stand.

U.S. District Judge Robert L. Hinkle also found that DeSantis (R) infringed on the First Amendment by considering Andrew Warren’s public remarks on controversial topics such as abortion and transgender care as “motivating factors” in the decision to suspend him.

But neither offered grounds to reinstate Warren, offering DeSantis a legal victory.

DeSantis communications director Taryn Fenske called it “a win for the governor and a win for the people of Florida.” Nonetheless, Hinkle’s 59-page order finds fault with the actions of DeSantis and his staff, as well as with the case and facts they brought to trial.

“The record includes not a hint of misconduct by Mr. Warren,” Hinkle wrote. “So far as this record reflects, he was diligently and competently performing the job he was elected to perform, very much in the way he told voters he would perform it … the assertion that Mr. Warren neglected his duty or was incompetent is incorrect.”

Although Hinkle found no wrongdoing on Warren’s part, he concluded it was a state matter.

DeSantis’s decision to suspend the twice-elected prosecutor in August alarmed many who saw it as an overreach by the governor. One of Warren’s attorneys called it “a political hit job.”

The popular Florida governor — who sailed to reelection in November and is widely considered a potential 2024 presidential candidate — justified the suspension by saying Warren didn’t have the right to “refuse to enforce Florida law.”

The Tampa area prosecutor said he was being punished for exercising his right to free speech. Earlier in the year, he signed two pledges written by Fair and Just Prosecution, an organization that advocates for reform-minded prosecutors. In one pledge, prosecutors vowed not to “criminalize reproductive health decisions.” The second statement made similar vows regarding people seeking transgender health care.

Warren, who was the first witness in the five-day nonjury trial in late November in Tallahassee, said the issue went beyond him.

“As I’ve said from the beginning, there’s so much more at stake than my job,” Warren said at a news conference the morning the trial began. “We’re not just fighting to do the job that I was elected to do, I’m fighting for the rights of voters across Florida to have the elected officials of their choice.”

In his testimony at the trial, Warren said the pledges he signed were never put into action or adopted as official policy. Two assistant state attorneys in Warren’s office backed up that assertion, testifying that they did not consider the statements a reflection of actual policy. But Warren’s chief of staff said he thought the pledge upholding abortion rights was tantamount to a policy directive.

In announcing the suspension, DeSantis also pointed to Warren’s decision not to prosecute 67 protesters arrested for unlawful assembly during demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020.

Warren was also instrumental in helping formerly incarcerated people regain their voting rights after DeSantis signed into law restrictions to a voter-approved constitutional amendment allowing them to register to vote. The prosecutor also created a conviction review office to examine innocence claims.

DeSantis blasted such actions as those of a “woke” prosecutor.

The trial provided a rare look inside the inner workings of DeSantis and his staff. Evidence and public records showed that the governor’s office was excited about the “totally free earned media” that resulted from the news conference where he announced the suspension. Careful staff tabulations estimated that the governor, who was running for reelection at the time, earned media coverage worth $2.4 million.

Testimony also showed that while DeSantis said he had asked his staff for a report of any prosecutors deemed to be “taking the law into their own hands,” the focus was on Warren from the start.

Larry Keefe, a former U.S. attorney in Florida whom DeSantis named as the state’s “safety czar,” testified that he consulted with a few Republican state attorneys and sheriffs, as well as Tampa area GOP donors, but did not conduct an extensive investigation.

During the trial, Warren’s attorneys asked members of DeSantis’s staff what the governor means when he calls people “woke.”

“To me, it means someone who believes that there are systemic injustices in the criminal justice system and on that basis they can decline to fully enforce and uphold the law,” said Ryan Newman, DeSantis’s general counsel.

Newman added that “it would be the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.”

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Musk’s Twitter may have already violated its latest FTC consent order



CNN
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Just two weeks into Elon Musk’s ownership of Twitter, the company may have already violated its consent agreement with the Federal Trade Commission, legal experts said.

If proven, a violation could ultimately lead to significant personal liability for Musk, escalating the risks he faces as he stumbles through a morass of business and content moderation headaches, most of which have been self-inflicted.

The potential violation stems from a reporting obligation Twitter must fulfill whenever the company experiences a change in structure, including mergers and sales.

Under Twitter’s latest FTC consent order, which was implemented this year, Twitter must submit a sworn compliance notice to the regulator within 14 days of any such change. The compliance notice is intended both to advise the FTC of major changes at the company as well as a commitment that it will continue to comply with the order, according to David Vladeck, a former senior FTC official and a law professor at Georgetown University.

Musk’s Twitter deal closed on Thursday, Oct. 27, prompting some legal experts to question Thursday whether Twitter had made the proper filings in light of the company’s mass layoffs and an exodus of senior executives. Among those resigning were its chief privacy officer and chief information security officer, who would be expected to be involved in the company’s compliance reporting.

“Godspeed to the poor b***ards dealing with that,” tweeted Riana Pfefferkorn, a research scholar at the Stanford Internet Observatory.

The FTC declined to comment on whether Twitter has submitted any compliance notices since Musk took over the company. Twitter, which laid off a substantial amount of its public relations team, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Alex Spiro, Musk’s attorney, told CNN on Thursday that “we are in a continuing dialogue with the FTC and will work closely with the agency to ensure we are in compliance.”

There are other, more substantive regulatory obligations that have come into question, too. They include requirements that Twitter produce written privacy assessments of any new “product, service or practice” — or when Twitter updates those things — that could affect user data or put it at risk.

The dizzying pace of product changes at Twitter since Musk’s takeover, combined with the company’s greatly reduced headcount, have raised doubts about whether Twitter is following the rules it agreed to — or if it even can.

“The chaos there is something the FTC is going to be worried about,” said Vladeck, “because there were serious deficiencies which led to the consent order in the first place, and the FTC is going to want to make sure they’re doing what they’re supposed to do.”

Internal concerns about Twitter’s compliance obligations were reflected in a Slack message viewed by CNN earlier this week, in which an employee warned colleagues that Musk could try to put responsibility for certifying FTC compliance onto individual engineers at the company.

“This will put a huge amount of personal, professional and legal risk onto engineers,” the employee wrote, adding that the new risks created by Musk could be “extremely detrimental to Twitter’s longevity as a platform.”

Matt Blaze, a professor of computer science and law at Georgetown University, urged Twitter employees to seek professional legal counsel “before signing anything or making any statement to regulators.”

“This is a bus you do NOT want to be thrown under,” Blaze tweeted.

FTC consent orders carry the force of law and any violations, if proven, could involve significant penalties including fines, restrictions on how Twitter can run its business and even potential sanctions on individual executives.

The company’s latest consent agreement was announced this spring after FTC allegations that Twitter misused user account security information, such as phone numbers and email addresses, for advertising purposes. The resulting consent order expanded on a 2011 consent agreement Twitter signed with the FTC committing the company to maintaining a robust cybersecurity program.

This summer, Twitter’s former head of security, Peiter “Mudge” Zatko, claimed Twitter was not meeting those obligations in an explosive whistleblower disclosure first reported by CNN and The Washington Post. (Twitter has previously pushed back on Zatko’s allegations, saying that security and privacy have “long been top company-wide priorities.”)

Those claims, which predate Musk’s ownership, may already have put Twitter on the hook for billions of dollars in potential FTC fines, legal experts have said.

Now, the latest claims of Twitter’s violations could mean even more money is at stake, as well as possible individual liability for Musk himself. Any alleged violations would first have to be proven, and the FTC would need to decide whether to enforce, said Vladeck. But under those circumstances, he said, “I think it’s likely Musk would be named” in a future consent order. “After all, he has made clear that he and he alone is making key decisions.”

The FTC has increasingly signaled it could seek to hold individual executives personally accountable if they’re found to have been responsible for a company’s violations, naming them in future orders and imposing binding requirements on their future conduct, even if they leave the company. (Last month, the FTC showed its willingness to follow through, imposing sanctions on the CEO of alcohol delivery service Drizly.)

Foreshadowing such a move, FTC Chair Lina Khan told US lawmakers that Twitter’s former CEO Parag Agrawal could “absolutely” be held personally liable in connection with Zatko’s allegations, if they are proven accurate. The FTC has not confirmed whether it is investigating Zatko’s allegations, but on Thursday, it issued a rare statement saying the agency is watching the current situation closely. As news about the executive departures unfolded, the agency said it is “tracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern.”

“No CEO or company is above the law, and companies must follow our consent decrees,” the FTC said. “Our revised consent order gives us new tools to ensure compliance, and we are prepared to use them.”

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TransUnion, Equifax, Experian may have violated credit reporting rules, Rep. Jim Clyburn says

A key Democrat wants credit reporting agencies Equifax, Experian and TransUnion investigated for allegedly failing to respond to consumer complaints during the pandemic.

Rep. James Clyburn, the chairman of the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, said the nation’s three largest nationwide consumer reporting agencies have “longstanding problems” with responding to consumers who raise complaints about credit reporting errors.

“These data also raise concerns about whether the [credit rating companies] are fulfilling all of their obligations to consumers and to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA),” the South Carolina Democrat wrote in an Oct. 13 letter to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra.

Clyburn asked the chief executive officers of Equifax, Experian and TransUnion in May for the companies’ responses to consumer complaints in the early days of the pandemic.

CFPB reported then that 4.1% of complaints were resolved in 2021, compared with nearly 25% of complaints in 2019, before the pandemic.

And the majority of credit report disputes have not resulted in the correction or removal of reported errors from credit reports. The subcommittee found that Equifax didn’t change more than half of the disputed items each year from 2019 through 2021. Experian corrected about 52% of the disputed late payments or other bad data while TransUnion made fixes to between 49% and 53% of credit reports during this time.

The subcommittee partly credited the pause on student loan payments and an increase in pandemic-related identity theft to credit reporting errors.

Under the CARES act, paused loan payments were supposed to be reported as current, though some lenders may have incorrectly categorized them as late. Consumer fraud can also lead to faulty consumer credit reports.

But consumers have been disputing information found in their credit reports on a larger scale than previously known, the subcommittee found. The CFPB estimated the combined number of dispute submissions among Equifax, Experian and TransUnion to be 8 million in 2021. But data obtained by the subcommittee showed Equifax, alone, received nearly 14 million complaints that year.

CFPB also received a “record-breaking” amount of complaints about the credit rating companies from 2020 through 2021 with more than 619,000 in 2021 alone. Consumers disputed nearly 336 million items, including names, addresses or credit accounts, on their credit reports from 2019 through 2021, the subcommittee found.

Yet according to evidence obtained by the subcommittee, the credit raters discard millions of disputes a year without investigation. At least 13.8 million were thrown out between 2019 and 2021, the subcommittee found.

Discarding disputes violates the fair credit laws if any are submitted directly by consumers to authorized representatives. The companies’ defense, says the subcommittee, is that disputes are discarded without investigation when they suspect a credit repair service is the one making the complaint.

But the subcommittee says each agency uses vague criteria to determine which disputes are submitted by an unauthorized third-party. Equifax, for instance, tosses out mail that “tends to use identical language and format [and] come from the same zip code.”

Experian accounts for “envelope characteristics” and “letter characteristics,” including “same/similar ink color,” and “same/similar font,” when choosing which disputes to disregard. TransUnion also uses envelope-based criteria in its discard process.

The subcommittee also found that the credit rating companies referred over half of the disputes to data furnishers for investigation between 2019 and 2021. TransUnion referred the most at 80% to 82%.

Data furnishers have been cited by the CFPB for conducting insufficient investigations. The bureau also cited the credit reporting companies for accepting these findings without an independent investigation.

“The prevalence of credit reporting errors has been particularly concerning at a time when Americans have needed access to credit in order to weather difficult economic circumstances brought on by the pandemic,” Clyburn wrote in the letter to Chopra. “Errors in credit reports can reduce consumers’ credit scores, potentially blocking access to loans, housing, and employment, among other serious consequences.”

The Consumer Data Industry Association, the trade association that represents Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, said that all disputes that consumers share directly with three credit raters are processed according to federal requirements.

“Recent reports have highlighted trends including increased activity by certain credit repair companies, which can inflate complaint numbers and undermine the process of addressing legitimate requests,” a representative for the association told CNBC. “The credit reporting industry will continue to collaborate with the CFPB and policymakers to better serve consumers and continue to deliver innovative solutions to increase economic opportunities for consumers.”

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