Search for: "Fox v. Federal Bureau of Investigation" Results 21 - 31 of 31
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10 Jun 2014, 6:35 am by rainey Reitman
It details the Obama administration’s prosecution of Fox News Washington bureau chief James Rosen, who was charged with criminal conspiracy for working with a source to publish classified materials. [read post]
16 May 2017, 6:28 pm by Bernie Burk
 Louis Freeh, who left the federal bench to run the FBI during the Clinton Administration, was (if memory serves) often referred to as “Judge Freeh” during his tenure there, and as Steve points out in his second post, has kept and used the title after returning to a law practice focused on security consulting and internal investigations at a small firm he started with former CIA General Counsel and retired federal district judge Stanley Sporkin. [read post]
26 Aug 2021, 2:59 pm by Kevin LaCroix
  This usually includes conducting a forensic investigation, updating written information security protocols, deploying patches and password resets, replacing hardware, conducting additional employee training, as well as analyzing differing state breach legislation and notifying consumers, attorneys general, and credit bureaus in accordance with those laws. [read post]
19 Mar 2019, 7:24 am by Katherine Kelley
But there is still no such crime as “sextortion” at the federal level—and the federal government still does not keep data on incidents of sextortion. [read post]
20 Dec 2010, 9:45 am by steven perkins
The FY 2011 Budget Request also sustains FY 2010 appropriations increases of over 21% for Bureau of Indian Affairs-funded public safety and law enforcement efforts and includes an additional $19 million to support 81 new FBI positions (45 agents) to investigate violent crimes in Indian Country. [read post]
28 Jul 2008, 5:45 pm
As a result, only the most geographically concentrated outbreaks would have garnered enough attention to prompt further investigation (Keene et al., 1991 p. 583). [read post]
29 Mar 2018, 5:27 am by Barry Sookman
The FairPlay coalition comprising more than 25 organizations representing hundreds of thousands of members of Canada’s creative community made a reasonable proposal to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), Canada’s telecommunications and broadcast regulator, to address the scourge of online copyright infringement.[1]  The proposal, which involves website blocking, was immediately attacked by anti-copyright activist Michael Geist… [read post]