Showing posts with label supreme court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label supreme court. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Dog Fighting Video and Free Speech

The Supreme Court in wading in on a controversial issue with the ACLU and the NRA siding with one another this should be a good one to watch. The issue simply put is over a video showing dog fights. If this is ruled unlawful then videos of bull fighting and many hunting videos could soon be ruled unlawful. Just a small step from there to outlawing certain fishing videos that show the death of our scaly friends. Although I oppose any form of dog fighting this video was used by the defendant in the case to condemn that so-called sport. As I see it, this should be a clear and easy case for the nine black-robed members of the high court, but then one can never be sure.

As a life long fisherman and hunter I see nothing wrong in video taping my fishing trips and the kill on hunting trips. I still maintain a number of videos taken south of the border at the bull rings. And as I was quick to point out to my grandson recently--they do kill the bulls. For some unknown reason he didn't know that and the young man is now 20 years old--what can I say, a product of our great school system.
read more Above image from Patriotic Gentleman
Supreme Court Weighs Free Speech in Dog Fighting Case
Robert Stevens, a dog lover, sold bloody pit bull fighting videos that have raised questions on whether free speech protects the sale of horrific scenes of animal cruelty.

WASHINGTON -- On the first Tuesday of October, the second day of its new session, the Supreme Court will take up the case of a dog lover whose bloody pit bull fighting videos have raised questions on whether free speech protects the sale of horrific scenes of animal cruelty.

Robert Stevens, 69, was sentenced by a Pittsburgh jury in 2005 to more than three years in prison for selling the graphic videos of dog fights. The Virginia man's sentence was harsher than the one NFL quarterback Michael Vick got for bankrolling a dog-fighting ring.

The 1999 law used in Stevens' sentencing "prohibits the knowing creation, sale, or possession of a depiction of a live animal being intentionally maimed, mutilated, tortured, wounded, or killed" for commercial gain. But the law stipulates that the material must also lack "serious religious, political, scientific, educational, journalistic, historical, or artistic value."

The case centers on a basic fundamental question examining the reach of the First Amendment. Is the law so broad that it also covers some protected speech, thus making it invalid on its face?

A lower appellate court ruled that it was, striking down Stevens' sentence.

Stevens has defended himself against charges of animal cruelty, insisting that he is a dog lover who distributes information about pit bulls to educate the public. Meanwhile, the government defends the decade-old law used to convict Stevens as an effective deterrent to stop animal cruelty, alleging that Stevens is the type of facilitator and profiteer the law is meant to stop. read more

Monday, June 15, 2009

Tomorrow's News Today - 2

Tomorrow's News Today---Sonia Sotomayor will be confirmed in July before the August recess and will become only the third female justice on the U.S. Supreme Court and the first Hispanic. The vote will be in the 65 - 35 range with a handful of republican senators crossing party lines to vote for confirmation. Her confirmation comes despite her most controversial decision on the U.S. 2nd Court of Appeals regarding the New Haven, Conn. fire department, being recently overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in a split, 5 to 4 decision with the deciding vote in that ruling coming from Justice Anthony Kennedy, who sided with the court's 4 conservatives.

On a lighter note Mr and Mrs Frank Lynn Jefferson of 1776 Independence Way, Patriot Valley, USA are the proud new parents of twin girls, Liberty and Belle. Liberty and Belle arrived a few minutes after midnight this July 4, 2009. Both girls are doing fine according to Dr Wright Wey, the attending physician.