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St. Louis pledges fast pothole repairs. Did it deliver?

9 months 2 weeks ago
A pothole we found last week on the corner of Skinker Boulevard and Clayton Road in the shadow of the Amoco sign was our most dramatic example of potholes in St. Louis. It seemed like the Grand Canyon when looking from the inside.
Chris Hayes

Prosecutor puts DOGE ahead of First Amendment

9 months 2 weeks ago

Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

We’re taking action against alarming attempts to stifle the press from state and federal adversaries. And don’t forget: we have tools and advice for how to safely share leaks with the press. Read the latest here.

Prosecutor puts DOGE ahead of First Amendment

Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) and a coalition of rights groups sent a letter to interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Edward R. Martin Jr. demanding he clarify statements suggesting he would prosecute critics of Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency. 

“There’s nothing more central to the First Amendment than the press and public’s right to criticize those carrying out controversial government work, harshly and by name,” we said in a statement. “A sitting U.S. attorney threatening to prosecute this constitutionally protected conduct is highly alarming — even un-American.” Read the statement and letter here.

Judges: Stop facilitating Trump’s extortionate settlements 

Companies like ABC and Meta aren’t the only ones to blame for capitulating to President Donald Trump by settling his SLAPP suits. So are the judges who bless these extortionate agreements. Judges don’t have to rubber-stamp settlements when there are glaring indicators of impropriety.

“It violates public policy — embodied by the First Amendment — for the courts to facilitate bribes paid by media publishers to presidents,” writes FPF Advocacy Director Seth Stern. “All of this is out in the open, and judges should not bury their heads in the sand when asked to sign off on it.” Read more here. 

Freelance journalists are journalists 

The Utah Legislature recently changed its press credential rules to exclude “blogs, independent, or other freelance journalists,” and one journalist alleges in a new lawsuit that the change was made to retaliate against him specifically.

The timing seems to support that claim, but even if he’s wrong about the legislature’s motives, the new rules show a troubling disregard for press freedom. “The Legislature should be celebrating the enhanced coverage that independent journalists bring to the statehouse and finding ways to accommodate them,” writes FPF Senior Advocacy Adviser Caitlin Vogus in The Salt Lake Tribune

USAID’s records must survive — even if the agency doesn’t

In a dubious legal move, the Trump administration is trying to shutter the U.S. Agency for International Development. But the widespread coverage of USAID’s future misses something important: the status of its records and the processing of its Freedom of Information Act requests.

These should not be secondary concerns. Our Daniel Ellsberg Chair on Government Secrecy Lauren Harper has the full story. And for more secrecy news, subscribe to Harper’s newsletter, The Classifieds.

What we’re reading

This is not a moment to settle with Trump (The New York Times). “Courage is contagious, but cowardice and cravenness can be, too. Soon it may be unusual and even more perilous for a news organization to protest when it is accused by the president of reportorial recklessness, however outlandish the charge might be,” Jameel Jaffer writes.

FCC launches investigation into KCBS after host reveals details of ICE agents in area (Barrett Media). The Federal Communications Commission cannot deem constitutionally protected journalism outside the "public interest" whenever it wants to censor the press. It’s an even more slippery slope with an unprincipled partisan hack like Brendan Carr in charge.

Judge tosses SF lawsuit that spurred Streisand Effect for tech exec’s arrest (Gazetteer San Francisco). While news giants with armies of expensive lawyers capitulate to the powerful, independent journalists represented by rights organizations and law professors fight back and win. Congratulations to Jack Poulson.

Protecting free speech in Texas: We need to stop SB 336 (Electronic Frontier Foundation).  Texas needs a strong anti-SLAPP law. If you live there, call or email your state representatives or the senators on the Senate Committee on State Affairs today and urge them to vote “no” on SB 336. It would weaken protections against anti-speech lawsuits by billionaires and politicians.

Justice Dept. says it will not bring charges in investigation of Project Veritas (The New York Times). The theory that publishers could be prosecuted for possessing or transporting documents their sources stole was constitutionally problematic. It's good this case won't set a bad First Amendment precedent, although we very much doubt that's why the Trump DOJ dropped it.

CIA analyst’s plea deal adds further intrigue to Espionage Act prosecution (The Dissenter). Plea deals requiring defendants to let the intelligence community supervise their communications with the press seem rather problematic under the First Amendment, no matter who the defendant is. 

Fox sues LinkedIn co-founder Hoffman for litigation funding info (Bloomberg Law). We’re for full transparency when it comes to billionaires funding defamation cases against media outlets, no matter who the billionaire is or who the media outlet is.

How to share sensitive leaks with the press

We’re just going to leave this one here for the foreseeable future. 

Freedom of the Press Foundation

Trump says US Steel will get investment from Nippon Steel, instead of being bought by it

9 months 2 weeks ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Friday suggested that Nippon Steel would no longer buy U.S. Steel as planned, but the Japanese company would instead invest in the symbolically important American business. The U.S. president mistakenly referred to Nippon Steel as “Nissan,” the Japanese automaker. But it's Nippon Steel's bid that generated controversy as [...]
JOSH BOAK, Associated Press

As Donald Trump and allies flout the law, Democrats struggle to fight back

9 months 2 weeks ago
WASHINGTON — Less than three weeks into his second term, President Donald Trump and those working under his auspices — most prominently billionaire Elon Musk — are making no apologies for barreling over institutions and flouting the law. The Trump administration’s sweeping actions tee up a major test for the guardrails Americans, red or blue, […]
Ashley Murray

Alton Sex Offender Faces Registration Failure, Weapon Charges

9 months 2 weeks ago
ALTON – An Alton resident and sex offender has been charged once again for failing to register; the same offender faces a weapon charge in a separate case. Corry J. Faulkner, 53, of the 2200 block of Gillis St. in Alton, was charged with two Class 2 felony counts of unlawful failure to register as a sex offender, his second subsequent such offense. On Dec. 30, 2024, Faulkner allegedly failed to register with the Alton Chief of Police every 90 days as legally required under the Sex Offender Registration Act. He had previously been convicted of the same offense in Madison County in 2023. Faulkner was also charged in a separate Madison County criminal case with possession of a weapon by a felon, a Class 3 felony. On Jan. 31, 2025, he reportedly possessed a Ruger 380 handgun after previously being convicted of a felony, failing to register as a sex offender. The Alton Police Department presented both cases against Faulkner, who Madison County Sheriff’s Office records

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