Anonymous ID: 0d0f68 March 25, 2020, 6:46 a.m. No.8558812   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8885 >>8905 >>8951 >>9130 >>9219 >>9229 >>9303 >>9345

another freakin stupid lawsuit, another corrupt judge

 

Judge rules lawsuit alleging Trump threatened free press can move forward

 

By Justin WiseMarch 25, 2020 - 09:13 AM EDT

 

A federal judge on Tuesday ruled that some of the claims in a literary advocacy group's lawsuit against President Trump over his threats to retaliate against critical media coverage can proceed.

 

U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield wrote in a 24-page opinion that PEN America had a "constitutional standing" to pursue claims for declaratory relief against Trump's practice of "selectively barring access" to the White House press corps, including by "revoking or threatening to revoke press credentials due to hostility to the reporters’ speech."

 

Schofield also ruled that the case could proceed on allegations that Trump revoked or threatened to revoke security clearances for government officials he dislikes.

 

The court granted Trump's motion to dismiss claims that he initiated government actions against certain media companies, threatened to revoke broadcast licenses and interfered in White House press access.

 

Schofield noted that PEN America's claims against Trump had merit, given that the White House has history with barring press access and that it revoked CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta's credentials in November 2018. Acosta's press pass was later reinstated, though the development caused former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders to release new guidelines for reporters.

 

“The press secretary indeed e-mailed the entire press corps to inform them of new rules of conduct and to warn of further consequences, citing the incident involving Mr. Acosta,” Schofield noted. “These facts plausibly allege that a motivation for defendant’s actions is controlling and punishing speech he dislikes.”

 

Acosta's credentials were temporarily stripped after a contentious exchange with the president at a press conference. A federal judge granted CNN's request to restore the pass, ruling that Acosta and his employer were likely to succeed in arguments that their Fifth Amendment rights to due process were violated by the White House.

 

PEN America filed a lawsuit in 2018 against Trump in an attempt to gain an order declaring that Trump's threats violated the First Amendment. The group also sought an injunction to block Trump from taking actions against journalists he doesn't like.

 

Schofield wrote on Tuesday that "issuing an injunction to the president would impede his discretionary authority in these realms, and more generally, risk improper judicial encroachment on the executive branch."

 

The case will now move into the discovery phase, and PEN America will be allowed to obtain documents from the government to help substantiate its claims, the group said.

 

“PEN America is profoundly grateful for the court’s timely decision," the group's president, Jennifer Egan, said in a statement. "Though we filed our lawsuit more than a year ago, the Trump administration’s punitive stance toward the press has continued unabated, with corrosive results for truth, fact, our democracy, and—most recently—public health."

 

https://thehill.com/homenews/media/489400-judge-rules-lawsuit-alleging-trump-threatened-free-press-can-move-forward

Anonymous ID: 0d0f68 March 25, 2020, 7:01 a.m. No.8558941   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8976 >>9130 >>9303

FBI’s coronavirus ‘fitness app’ slammed as a way to extract personal info

 

The FBI is helping gym rats looking to stay in shape during the coronavirus lockdown by promoting a fitness app — but it requires users to provide their GPS coordinates.

 

The law enforcement agency urged people in a Monday tweet to “download the FBI’s Physical Fitness Test app to learn proper form for exercises you can do at home like pushups and situps.” The catch is that the FBI FitTest created in 2018 uses the “phone’s GPS and accelerometer,” which the FBI claims provides the user a “more realistic PFT experience.”

 

The digital workout tool has been slammed on social media as a sneaky way for the government to extract personal info amid the coronavirus pandemic.

 

“DO NOT — AND WE CANNOT STRESS THIS NEXT PART ENOUGH — DOWNLOAD THIS APP,” tweeted Fight for the Future yesterday. “I’ll pass on this one,” seconded a Twitter user.

 

Another distrustful user snarked: “Looking to get ripped while ceding your location data to the FBI? Boy, do we have the app for you.”

 

Despite the flurry of suspicious social-media posts, the FBI maintains that it “does not collect personal user data from this app; the information remains stored on the device in accordance with FBI.gov’s privacy policy.”

 

On Friday, New York governor Andrew Cuomo ordered New York City to be placed on lockdown, forcing nonessential businesses like gyms to shutter as the city becomes a global COVID-19 epicenter. Many have since been using the internet as a resource for at-home fitness tips and turning to apps for wellness.

 

While not the bureau’s official fitness test, the FBI fit-test app promises users the opportunity to “train like an agent” by engaging in a variety of equipment-less exercises, including situps, pushups, a 300-meter sprint and a 1.5-mile run.

 

“Whether you are at the gym, on the track, at home, or on the run, you can use the FBI Physical Fitness Test app anywhere,” reads the description on the FBI website. The mobile application — available on Google Play, Apple’s App Store and the bureau’s site — also features video workout tutorials to ensure that home fitness buffs are practicing proper techniques.

 

App users can choose between “practice” and “test mode,” which can determine how they’d fare on the official fitness exam by simulating test conditions. Agency standards stipulate that to achieve a maximum score of 50, male applicants need to complete at least 58 situps in a minute, perform 71 pushups in an unlimited amount of time, run 300 meters in 40.9 seconds or less, run 1.5 miles in eight minutes and 59 seconds or less and do 20 pullups or more in an unlimited amount of time. However, prospective agents only need 12 cumulative points to pass, according to the scoring chart.

 

https://nypost.com/2020/03/24/fbis-coronavirus-fitness-app-slammed-as-a-way-to-extract-personal-info/