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May 23, 2013
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U.K. Courts to Journalists: Stow ItPosted on Apr 17, 2011Parliamentary official John Hemming has drawn attention to a new type of court order forbidding members of Britain’s fourth estate to cover cases deemed too sensitive for public consideration. The order, known as a super-injunction, promises legal consequences—including possible jail time—for journalists daring to ask the wrong questions or even report a restriction’s existence. Details on the injunction that prompted Hemming’s criticism were not forthcoming. —ARK
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By samosamo, April 17, 2011 at 9:28 pm Link to this comment
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Report thisYou mean rupert murderok can’t get his invention of ‘news’ into
england to help anesthetize those irritating british subjects with
msm balderdash, razzle-dazzle and bunkum? What are the
courts to do?
By TDoff, April 17, 2011 at 6:15 pm Link to this comment
Uh oh. If the Brits can get away with this, will the US be far behind? Ask a question, go directly to jail!
Report thisI’ll bet those US people AKA ‘corporations’ and their minions in politics and law and lobbying would love to put that in the law books. But…do you think it might violate the 1st amendment to the Constitution?