Search for: "Morales v. The City Of New York, et al" Results 1 - 20 of 59
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
22 Mar 2010, 11:39 pm
”Fry alleged that she had been unlawfully terminated because she complained that her office’s reports on New York City’s financial situation were subjected to a politically motivated “whitewash. [read post]
30 Jun 2012, 9:42 am by Chris Castle
  As Jaron Lanier wrote in the New York Times: Clay Shirky, a professor at New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program, has suggested that when people engage in seemingly trivial activities like “re-Tweeting,” relaying on Twitter a short message from someone else, something non-trivial — real thought and creativity — takes place on a grand scale, within a global brain. [read post]
10 Jan 2011, 6:46 am by Michael Sweig, JD
Giuliani, Mayor of the City of New York, et al, 290 F.3d 143 (2nd Cir. 2002), now US Supreme Court Justice Sotomayor, then a circuit court appeals judge, dissented from the majority decision that the New York City Police Department didn’t violate a policeman’s First Amendment rights when it fired him for mailing (from home and anonymously) bigoted screeds against Jews and Blacks. [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 3:10 am by New Books Script
Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. : Published for the Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law, Columbia University in the City of New York by Oceana Publications, 1990 xxiii, 318 p. ; 24 cm. [read post]
30 May 2022, 9:00 pm by Samuel Estreicher and Troy Kessler
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and New York City’s own Commission on Human Rights (NYCCHR). [read post]
8 Mar 2019, 10:46 am by David Greene
”8 These tactics were largely effective: because of the lawsuits, the New York Times pulled its Alabama reporter for several years, sharply limiting its original reporting on events there.9 Both NYT v Sullivan and Abernathy et al. v. [read post]
10 Jan 2011, 6:46 am by Michael Sweig, JD
Giuliani, Mayor of the City of New York, et al, 290 F.3d 143 (2nd Cir. 2002), now US Supreme Court Justice Sotomayor, then a circuit court appeals judge, dissented from the majority decision that the New York City Police Department didn’t violate a policeman’s First Amendment rights when it fired him for mailing (from home and anonymously) bigoted screeds against Jews and Blacks. [read post]