Score one for Silicon Valley
Over the past week, Silicon Valley's internet powerhouses outdid Hollywood, writes WILLIAM H. FREIVOGEL, by stopping internet piracy bills pushed by the big studios..
Over the past week, Silicon Valley's internet powerhouses outdid Hollywood, writes WILLIAM H. FREIVOGEL, by stopping internet piracy bills pushed by the big studios..
Even some of the most conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court were ready to admit it may have been unfair that St. Louisan Galin Frye's public defender failed to tell him about a favorable plea bargain. But even the most liberal
A 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court decided Monday to shut the door on a class-action sex discrimination suit on behalf of 1.5 million women workers at Walmart. The women claimed that sex discrimination pervaded the company's culture from
Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster filed an unorthodox legal brief in the lawsuit against the national health-care law. Filled with literary references to Walden Pond, it argued both sides of the legal issue. At one point, Koster argued
A leading constitutional law expert at Washington University called Monday's court decision striking down a key provision of the health-care law "embarrassing" and "anachronistic." But a libertarian lawyer said it was a refreshing reminder that
The St. Louis Police Department has apologized to protesters for "extended detentions" and unwarranted "infringement of civil liberties" during the 2003 World Agriculture Forum in St. Louis. The apology was announced Monday by the American Civil
If Elizabeth A. Thrasher is to be convicted of the felony of cyber-harassment, St. Charles County prosecutors may have to justify carving out a new exception to the First Amendment, writes William H. Freivogel, about the St. Peters woman who
Opponents of Missouri's non-partisan court plan are making a last-minute attempt to persuade the Missouri Senate to pass a resolution to send a new judicial selection plan to the voters. They're also running radio ads throughout the state to
- The Nazi rally Saturday near the Arch and a counter-rally in Forest Park prompt former ACLU director Joyce Armstrong to recall similar events. In the '70s, St. Louis took a different approach than Skokie, Ill., and gave Nazis a permit to
A federal appeals court in St. Louis ruled Friday that Missouri can't enforce a law passed to stop anti-gay picketers from protesting at military funerals. The law may violate the First Amendment, the court said.