Perry v. Schwarzenegger
Judge strikes down California's same-sex marriage ban, finding that "Moral disapproval alone is an improper basis on which to deny rights to gay men and lesbians."
U.S. v. Arizona
Arizona judge enjoins enforcement of a new immigration law's requirement that police determine the immigration status of
every person who is arrested.
McGuire v. United Airlines
Michigan woman says a United Express flight crew locked her in a plane for nearly four hours after it landed because they failed to ensure that all passengers had disembarked.
R.H. v. Schenectady Sch. Dist.
Middle school student says he was suspended for wearing rosary beads because the rosary "is considered a gang-related symbol" and cannot be worn in school.
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• Parents of a 10-year-old boy who witnessed a killer whale's fatal attack on a trainer sue Sea World Orlando for infliction of emotional distress. "Without question, it was reasonably foreseeable and in fact predictable that an attack such as this one by a killer whale with the tendencies of Tilikum was inevitable." Connell v. Sea World

• Denver judge dismisses Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols's civil rights claims against prison officials for denying him a high-fiber diet.
Nichols v. Federal Bureau of Prisons

• Illinois teenager with cerebral palsy sues the Special Olympics for refusing to let her play basketball with the help of a service dog.
Youngwith v. Special Olympics

• Montana judge sets aside a government decision removing protections for the northern Rocky Mountain gray wolf. The Endangered Species Act "was not intended to sow the dragon's teeth of strife or to plant the seeds of future conflicts that have given rise to this case."
Defenders of Wildlife v. Salazar

• San Francisco judge dismisses a cereal consumer's false advertising suit. "[T]here is nothing in the packaging or marketing of Cap’n Crunch that would in any way deceive a reasonable consumer into believing that the cereal contains or derives nutritional value from real fruit." Werbel v. PepsiCo

• Iowa judge says a sheriff denied the applications of a father and son for concealed weapons permits in retaliation for their political activism. "This is a great reminder that the First Amendment protects the sole individual who may be a gadfly, kook, weirdo, nut job, whacko, and spook, with the same force of protection as folks with more majoritarian and popular views." Dorr v. Weber

• 5th Circuit rules that a school district violated the religious freedom of a Native American boy by requiring him to wear his long hair in a bun on top of his head or in a braid tucked into his shirt. The boy "has a sincere religious belief in wearing his hair uncut and in plain view."
A.A. v. Needville Ind. Sch. Dist.

• 11th Circuit denies a challenge to an ordinance restricting handouts of food to the homeless in Orlando parks. "[W]e are unpersuaded that the conduct of simply feeding people ... is expressive for First Amendment purposes."
First Vagabonds Church v. City of Orlando




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Injury Claims

Hawaii Surfing Legend Wipes Out in Libel Lawsuit Print

Craig “Owl” Chapman has surfed some of Hawaii's mightiest waves. But he crashed out in a federal court as a jury found a surfing magazine did not defame him by allegedly portraying him as a “degenerate, pathetic, and drug addled social outcast.”


The case made waves in the surfer community, pitting representatives of two surf meccas against each other. On one side was Owl, a legend on the North Shore of Oahu, and on the other, The Surfer's Journal, a high-end, glossy magazine published in San Clemente, Calif.

Owl reportedly has said he brought the lawsuit so the surf media would “grow up and quit acting like teen mags in fantasyland.” But after a six-day trial, a jury in Honolulu decisively rejected his claim that freelance writer Jeff Johnson fabricated a profile of him entitled “El Hombre Invisible” which ran in the August-September 2006 issue of The Surfer's Journal.

“It’s a complete victory for the defendants and a strong affirmation of the media’s right to write about public figures,” said Jeffrey S. Portnoy, an attorney for the magazine.

Johnson's story details his frustrating experience purchasing a custom single-fin surfboard from Owl sometime in the mid-1990s. He relied on his memory and journals he kept at the time, testifying he did not contact Owl while researching the article because he wanted to provide a third-person view of him, rather than Owl's perception of himself.

In one of several references to cult author William S. Burroughs, the story describes Owl's board-shaping room as “Naked Lunch meets Through the Looking Glass.” Owl is quoted as calling world surf champion Kelly Slater a “little fucker” and, for “Liner Notes” accompanying the story, The Surfer's Journal editor Steve Pezman interviewed surfer Jackie Baxter about Owl.

“I heard he's been sober for the last year,” he quoted Baxter as saying. “One year out of 40? ([L]aughing[.]) That's good!”

For Owl, the article was far from a hoot. In a complaint filed in January 2007, he said he never shaped a surfboard for Johnson at any time in the mid-1990s and called the article a “ridiculously extreme portrait” which

points to a grandiose egotist who is mean-spirited, self-serving, full of braggadocio, impossibly arrogant and, in the end, a degenerate, pathetic, and drug addled social outcast.

U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright summarily dismissed much of the case in December, allowing Owl to go to trial only on statements implying he did not deliver the board to Johnson on time and according to Johnson's specifications; a quote referring to an altercation Owl allegedly had with another surfer; and the “little fucker” and Baxter quotes.

“[The court cannot unequivocally find that attributing a quote to Plaintiff calling Kelly Slater ... a 'little fucker' would not injure his reputation as a surfer or surfboard shaper as a matter of law,” Seabright said.

But in its verdict, the jury found none of the statements were false -– and so never even got to the issue of whether they were defamatory.

Owl was seeking some $600,000 in special damages along with unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. Whether he could have shown any injury to his reputation is unclear since a reasonable juror -– perhaps schooled on Sean Penn's character in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” -- might consider “degenerate” and “drug addled” a benign way of describing a surfer.

Johnson testified that he misplaced or threw out most of his journals before Owl filed the suit. In the summary judgment ruling, Seabright found his use of narrative, figurative statements and opinion were not actionable and

to the extent Plaintiff maintains that the references to Burroughs and his literary works imply that Plaintiff is a murderer or a “sexual deviant,” that argument is far too attenuated to support his claims.

UPDATES

  • Judge Seabright denied Owl's new trial motion in a June 3, 2009 order.

  • Owl filed a notice of appeal June 22, 2009.


  • This story linked by:


    By Matthew Heller
    3/8/09


     
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