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..
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
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.
Ruling means Missouri cannot bar registered sex offenders from "Halloween-related contact" with children and from leaving home between 5 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. on Halloween except for "just cause," such as a job or a medical emergency. A federal
Jane Doe I, et al vs. Jeremiah W. Nixon, et al.
Some conservatives have complained for years that less qualified women or African-Americans have been elevated to high office over better qualified white males. Gov. Matt Blunt arguably did the opposite in elevating Zel Fischer to the Missouri
In the many hours that I watched Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. preside over the Senate Judiciary Committee, I sometimes smiled, sometime grimaced and sometimes wished I could somehow turn off his microphone. My overall impression was that Biden was
A federal appeals court in St. Louis has told [1] (on the 8th circuit site search for case number 07-2322, U.S. vs. Missouri) a lower court judge to take another look to see if Missouri is in compliance with a federal law requiring states to
The U.S. Senate passed [1] a new foreign intelligence surveillance bill on Wednesday. U.S. Sen. Christopher S. "Kit" Bond, R-Mo., who described [2]it as "a better deal than... even (the White House) had hoped to get," reassured Americans they
The U.S. Supreme Court refused [1] on Monday to review a case where a St. Louis fantasy baseball company got court approval to use the names, bios and stats of Major League Baseball players without paying Major League Baseball or the players.