From Institute for Justice <[email protected]>
Subject Liberty & Law: Gag order silences civil rights attorney
Date October 16, 2024 7:27 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Plus new video on snooping "fish cops." | View in browser ([link removed] )

Institute for Justice updates

Daniel Horwitz ([link removed] )

Free Speech

Civil Rights Attorney Silenced by Gag Order Fights Back

Back in July 2022, a federal magistrate imposed a gag order against civil rights attorney Daniel Horwitz, preventing him from making public comments about one of his own lawsuits: a wrongful death case against a private prison. The court scolded Daniel, saying “trials are meant to occur in the courtroom, not the media.” Since then, Daniel has been challenging the court’s rule limiting attorney speech as a violation of the First Amendment, but the court has avoided ruling on the issue. Daniel teamed up with the IJ to file a federal lawsuit challenging the court’s attorney gag rule.

Read More
([link removed] )

Trina Martin and her son Gabe ([link removed] )

Immunity & Accountability

The FBI Raided the Wrong Home—the Government Refuses to Pay for the Damage

One morning, Trina Martin, her seven-year-old son Gabe, and her partner Toi were jolted awake by the sound of a flashbang grenade exploding in their living room. Toi, fearing that the home was being robbed, pulled Trina into the bedroom closet and reached for his legally owned shotgun. Just as he was about to grab it, an FBI agent barged in, threw him to the ground, and began interrogating him and Trina. When Toi told the agents his address, it dawned on them that they had raided the wrong house. Now, IJ is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to revive their lawsuit for accountability, which has been thrown out by the lower courts.

Read more » ([link removed] )

KS_Ruth-Herbel_Marion-Retaliation_IFJ_8075-768x432 ([link removed] )

Immunity & Accountability

Marion, Kansas Vice Mayor Gets First Round Victory in Lawsuit Over Unconstitutional Raid

Ruth Herbel’s federal civil rights lawsuit will move forward after a ruling issued this month. Ruth sued multiple Marion officials, the city, and the county over violations of her First and Fourth Amendment rights during a raid on her home last year. With a bogus warrant in hand, police raided Ruth’s home and seized her cell phone. Even after the warrant was withdrawn, the chief and mayor continued to look for a way to prosecute Ruth. Government officials cannot use criminal investigations to punish their political opponents, which is why Ruth filed this lawsuit.

Read more » ([link removed] )

WATCH: 'Fish Cop' Caught Snooping, Harassing Couple ([link removed] )

Click to watch ([link removed] )

IJ Podcasts

BTB Podcast ([link removed] )

Beyond the Brief: Town Council Blocks Business for Causing...Competition?!?

In America, the government doesn’t get to pick winners and losers in the marketplace. Yet states and cities throughout the country block new business to protect established interests. Awa Diagne has been braiding hair for 30 years, but when she tried to open a braiding salon in an Atlanta suburb, the town told her it would provide too much competition.

Listen now » ([link removed] )

Short Circuit ([link removed] )

Short Circuit: Supreme Court Preview at UNC!

For the 8th year, Short Circuit travels to the University of North Carolina to preview the Supreme Court’s new term. IJ’s Justin Pearson serves as your host, and joining him once again is UNC professor Andrew Hessick. You’ll learn about the First Amendment’s history with the Internet, applications of the First Step Act, where things stand with speaking occupations, and the twilight status of the Bivens doctrine.

Listen now » ([link removed] )

oie_CayqLTrdruXJ ([link removed] )

Beyond the Brief: Town Council Blocks Business for Causing...Competition?!?

It's time to get into the legal weeds. Sam Gedge, John Wrench, and Anthony Sanders of the Institute for Justice muse about citation proprieties, pleading proprieties, causes of action, special masters at SCOTUS, riparian rights in space, dropping judges’ names, and withholding from that last Aubrey-Maturin book so you don’t commit a circumnavigation.

Listen now » ([link removed] )

See All Podcasts
([link removed] )

Support Our Work

Champions for a Free and Just America

Your tax-deductible contribution helps IJ fight for Americans’ rights. IJ defends ordinary people who want to pursue their vision of the American Dream but find that the government is standing in their way. We stand with our clients no matter how long their cases take and we win nearly 75% of the time.

Donate Today
([link removed] )

Facebook ([link removed] )

X ([link removed] )

YouTube ([link removed] )

Instagram ([link removed] )

Facebook ([link removed] )

Institute for Justice, 901 N. Glebe Road, Suite 900, Arlington, Virginia 22203

Unsubscribe ([link removed] )
Manage preferences ([link removed] )

© 2024

If this message was forwarded to you, you can sign up for Liberty & Law bi-weekly here ([link removed] ) .

View in browser ([link removed] )
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis