Welcome to the LSIS Investigative Journal

Welcome to the LSIS Investigative Journal

Monday, December 20, 2021

Alabama judge who called colleagues ‘Uncle Tom’ removed from bench

Alabama judge who called colleagues ‘Uncle Tom’ removed from bench
New York Post
December 18, 2021
By Conor Skelding

 


An Alabama judge who called her fellow jurists “Uncle Tom” and “heifer,” and who allegedly put her finger on the scales in domestic cases has been yanked from the bench.

A nine-judge panel found that Nakita Blocton, of Jefferson County, Ala., had a history of “inappropriate comments” and, as regarded her staff, a “pattern of abuse,” according to Law & Crime.

That abuse included “excessive, unproductive, and unnecessary nights and weekends” she forced her underlings to work, according to the panel’s Dec. 10 judgment.
Nakita BloctonBlocton called her fellow jurists “Uncle Tom” and “heifer.”Twitter

And when her actions came under investigation by the state Judicial Inquiry Commission, the disgraced magistrate attempted a coverup, “order[ing] employees to allow her to see their private cellphones so that information that might be relevant to the Commission’s investigation could be deleted,” according to the judgment.

Blocton, who was a circuit judge in the Birmingham court’s domestic relations division, also used fake Facebook accounts “to communicate with litigants in a pending domestic-relations case in an effort to affect the outcome of the case,” according to the judgment.

She threatened one party in a divorce case and provided advice to another through the fake accounts, according to the complaint.

“False Prophet How Much Is Your White Judge Paying You,” she wrote to the disfavored party. “THE DEVIL IS WATCHING YOU.”

She used fake accounts to “friend” divorce lawyers and even leak information on other judges, according to the complaint.

Her attorney, Emory Anthony, told Above the Law: “We were trying to keep her on the bench, and we were disappointed they removed her from the bench.”


https://nypost.com/2021/12/18/alabama-judge-nakita-blocton-removed-from-bench/



Monday, October 4, 2021

Cosby Held Liable (Again) for Ex-Lawyer's Press Statements

 


 Cosby Held Liable (Again) for Ex-Lawyer's Press Statements

FindLaw
By Joseph Fawbush, Esq.
August 02, 2019 10:07 AM

The California Court of Appeals recently held that Bill Cosby could be liable for public comments his ex-lawyer made on his behalf. This was the second time the California Court of Appeals took up defamation issues involving Cosby and Janice Dickinson, who accused Cosby of raping her in 1982.

The opinion came out a day after Bill Cosby and Janice Dickenson settled for what Dickinson’s attorney described as an “epic amount.”
Anti-SLAPP Motion Sought to End Defamation Suit

The case didn’t just settle for an epic amount, it also involved an epic amount of legal jostling.

Janice Dickinson filed a defamation lawsuit against Bill Cosby in 2015 for comments his attorney, Martin Singer, made shortly after an interview she gave to Entertainment Tonight where she alleged Cosby raped her.

Singer released statements on November 18, 19, 20 and 21 that stated both explicitly and implied in various terms that Dickinson was lying and making opportunistic claims.

That February, Dickinson’s attorney, Lisa Bloom, sent a letter requesting retraction of the comments made on November 18 and 19. Neither Singer nor Cosby retracted the statements. The original complaint alleged that since Cosby failed to retract his attorney’s statements, Cosby endorsed and ratified those statements.

Cosby then filed an anti-SLAPP motion, alleging that Dickinson could not win because her claims could not be discoverable under attorney-client privilege. Ultimately, the issue went to the California Court of Appeals, who held that her claims were not barred. The court remanded, and further legal action ensued, with Dickinson filing an amended complaint and Cosby again filing an anti-SLAPP motion. The California court of Appeals again weighed in, this time on the comments made on November 20 and 21. The issue was not just whether Cosby was vicariously liable, but also directly liable, for the comments his attorney made.
Attorney-Client Privilege Not Applicable – But Only for Cosby

The court determined that there was enough evidence to support Dickinson’s claim that Cosby is directly liable for his attorney’s claims. While Cosby argued that any relevant discovery would be protected under attorney-client privilege, the California Court of Appeals noted that Dickinson could potentially prove her case by showing that Singer routinely sought approval prior to sending out letters to the press on behalf of clients in his 40-year career.

Further, the court held that there was enough evidence that Cosby ratified the statements that he could be held vicariously liable for the statements. It was enough for the court to deny Cosby’s anti-SLAPP motion in its entirety.

Interestingly, Singer was also named as a defendant in the amended complaint. However, the trial court granted his anti-SLAPP motion, writing that the only way Singer could have known his statements were false were through conversations with Cosby; conversations that are protected under attorney-client privilege and not discoverable. Counsel for defendants can rest a bit easier.

Cosby is currently appealing his criminal conviction for a separate instance involving sexual assault.

 

https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/cosby-held-liable-again-for-ex-lawyers-press-statements 

Online dispute resolution promises to increase access to justice, but challenges remain

Online dispute resolution promises to increase access to justice, but challenges remain

By Lyle Moran
October 1, 2021, 4:10 am CDT

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David Cowan has seen firsthand how contentious small claims cases can get.

Self-represented litigants unfamiliar with court procedures often become frustrated with the way hearings are conducted, he says, and take it out on their opposition by engaging in irrelevant personal attacks.

The heated nature of such proceedings is a major reason why Cowan says he harbored some doubts about a court initiative launched in late February requiring litigants in small claims cases to try to settle their disputes through an online platform before appearing for court hearings.

Court leaders say the online dispute resolution program, known as LA-ODR, is part of their ongoing efforts to enhance access to justice for self-represented litigants through the use of technology. A 2019 California Justice Gap Study found that 55% of Californians at all income levels experienced at least one civil legal problem in their household in the prior year, but nearly 70% of them received no legal assistance.

The urgent need to process cases remotely amid the COVID-19 pandemic also was an impetus for small claims ODR and for the LA court’s May 2020 announcement it was expanding the use of Tyler Technologies’ Modria ODR platform to help resolve child custody and visitation issues.

The court’s small claims program enables parties to use electronic devices such as smartphones to confidentially share documents and communicate at times convenient to them about the issues in play. The parties are also guided through a series of questions about their cases and can use free online mediation services to help them work through their differences. If litigants reach a settlement, the ODR system, developed by TurboCourt, generates the forms necessary to finalize the deal and electronically files the agreement with the court.

Cowan, who supervises the civil division of the nation’s largest trial court, says he’s been pleasantly surprised by the early results. Nearly 1,000 cases had been registered for ODR within the program’s first two weeks, and negotiations had started in roughly two-thirds of those cases, Cowan said at the ABA Section of Dispute Resolution’s virtual spring conference in April.

As of August, nearly 300 small claims cases had been resolved through the ODR platform without the need for any court appearances, according to subsequent figures provided by the court. While those numbers may seem like a drop in the bucket for a court that in the 2018-2019 fiscal year saw roughly 59,000 small claims cases filed, Cowan says every case that gets efficiently resolved through ODR is helpful, and he emphasizes that it often takes time for new systems to gain traction.

He also notes that ODR gives litigants the chance—for free—to work out agreements without their needing to make their way through Los Angeles’ notorious traffic to hearings, a perk that would likely be appealing even without a raging pandemic.

And beyond the consumer benefits, ODR enables the court to focus on cases that don’t get settled online and need judicial attention. “I think it definitely is an additional means of providing access to justice, and at the same time not closing any doors to justice, either,” Cowan says. “It seems like a win-win for everybody.”

The LA Superior Court is one of at least 89 courts across the nation that have turned to online dispute resolution in recent years with the dual goals of strengthening access to justice for litigants and more efficiently processing cases. The growing interest in ODR among courts has been fueled by the success of some early pioneers as well as the pandemic, which prompted many courthouses to close their doors for months and resulted in large case backlogs.

But courts’ forays into ODR have not come without hiccups. Some courts are struggling to get their initiatives off the ground because of technological challenges and opposition within the legal community. Additionally, there are ongoing consumer advocate concerns about whether the issues self-represented litigants face in the traditional courtroom setting can be effectively addressed by ODR platforms—and even ODR supporters acknowledge that there is always room for improvement.
ODR has e-commerce roots

While ODR has been used by e-commerce businesses such as eBay and PayPal to help buyers and sellers resolve their disputes for more than a decade, it has taken far longer to gain a foothold in U.S. courts.

According to the National Center for State Courts, this country’s first court-connected ODR system did not launch until 2014, which is when the 14A District Court in Washtenaw County, Michigan, began piloting a platform to resolve certain traffic offenses. Its system was developed by Michigan-based Court Innovations Inc., which calls its ODR platform Matterhorn and was founded by University of Michigan law professor J.J. Prescott.

Other courts started to slowly add ODR programs in the subsequent years, but there were still only 19 sites by the end of 2017, and most were in Michigan, according to an ABA Center for Innovation Report released last year. Experts credit Court Innovations Inc. and forward-thinking court leaders for Michigan’s early leadership in ODR.

It was in 2018 and 2019 when the pace of ODR adoption by courts picked up significantly, with 47 sites being added, according to the Center for Innovation. This brought the total number of court-connected ODR locations to 66 spread across 12 states as of the end of 2019.

Another 23 court-sponsored ODR offerings were launched in 2020 and the first four months of 2021, according to an NCSC report released in May, and most of these programs began providing services during COVID-19.

While there are differences in the various ODR platforms courts are using, most offer core features along the lines of those present in Los Angeles. ODR users can log in from mobile phones, home computers or other electronic devices. Often, they answer a series of questions about the nature of their dispute so the platform can determine what legal issues and potential remedies might be in play. The platform also allows litigants to communicate and share documents securely, and many have neutral human facilitators to help resolve matters. Engaging in a virtual mediation is increasingly an option for litigants as well. If the parties remain at an impasse or don’t meet a deadline for settling via ODR, the traditional court hearing process moves forward.

These court-sponsored platforms provide services for a wide array of case types. Traffic was by far the most common of the 14 case areas offered as of the end of 2019, according to the ABA report, with 34 sites offering ODR for those disputes. Other common case types include warrants, civil debt and small claims.

These practice areas are among the ones in which a high percentage of litigants are self-represented, and this results in many civil cases being uncontested and ending in default judgments or dismissals. Proponents claim ODR can make it easier for these self-represented parties to participate in the legal system because it allows them to handle their cases without having to go to a physical courthouse, a journey that can require taking time off work and finding child care. Litigants who use ODR platforms also typically don’t accrue the costs associated with traditional litigation. Additionally, supporters say ODR can help consumers resolve their legal matters more efficiently and without the uncertainty of stressful issues hanging over their heads for extended periods.

“The time to resolution online is days—not weeks, not months, not years,” says Colin Rule, the co-founder of Modria, an ODR provider that was later acquired by Tyler Technologies.
Early adopters

Proponents argue ODR’s benefits are supported by results in the field, including from some of the early adopters among courts.

In late 2016, Franklin County Municipal Court in Ohio launched an ODR platform focused on City of Columbus tax cases. This subset of small claims matters historically had a high rate of default judgments against defendants because of their lack of participation. In the first year of implementation, 78% of tax cases handled within the ODR system developed by Matterhorn were resolved “either through short-term agreements that resulted in full dismissal (55%) or through some form of long-term payment plan (23%).” These statistics were included in a 2017 report from the Joint Technology Committee, which was created by the Conference of State Court Administrators, the National Association for Court Management and the NCSC.

The joint committee also reported that nearly 30% of users accessed the Franklin County ODR system outside of court hours, and roughly 17% of users resided “outside the county and/or state and would likely have had significant difficulty resolving their cases without the ODR process.”

The positive trends the committee highlighted continued in subsequent years and prompted the court to begin offering ODR for additional case types, says Alex Sanchez, manager of the Franklin County Municipal Court’s small claims and mediation division. “All in all, we met all of our goals for the platform, both in increased access and in reducing the default judgment rate for our small claims cases.”

Also in late 2016, the 20th Circuit Court in Michigan’s Ottawa County began piloting ODR for child support compliance issues. In that county, a parent who fails to pay child support typically needs to appear at a show-cause hearing and could have a warrant issued for their arrest if they do not attend.

The Matterhorn ODR platform Ottawa County started using allowed it to communicate with noncustodial parents regarding compliance with child support orders, including through text messaging. In the first year of ODR implementation, show-cause hearings for failure to pay were down 27%, and failure-to-appear arrest warrants were down 36%, according to the Joint Technology Committee report.

Those trend lines have continued in the years since, according to Kevin Bowling, the court administrator for the 20th Circuit Court. Additionally, for those noncustodial parents who have participated in ODR, the number of them making child support payments has increased by 25% to 30%, Bowling reports.

He says it was especially beneficial for his court to be able to offer families ODR options amid the COVID-19 pandemic, including through a new online system launched for parenting time matters in August 2020.
Saving time

Beyond the consumer benefits, supporters say ODR platforms can also help relieve the administrative burden court systems face in processing cases, particularly in high-volume practice areas.

Officials in Utah, which began rolling out ODR for small claims in 2018 as part of a pilot, say the in-house platform the state developed has benefitted courts in myriad ways.

Judge Brendan McCullagh from the West Valley City Justice Court recalls that prior to implementing ODR, the two-hour blocks of time scheduled for small claims matters would often be booked with up to 50 cases. He says a large majority of these matters would ultimately result in defaults because of one or both parties not being present, but working through the cases to see who was present would eat up valuable courtroom time. ODR helps cull the failures to appear and defaults from the court process because those matters are now managed administratively, according to McCullagh, and the cases that the parties can easily resolve online also no longer require the use of courtroom time. “That leaves us with the cases that really do need to be tried,” McCullagh says.

He says ODR also assists with the small claims cases that come before him for hearings because the process enables the parties to pinpoint the key issues in play. He credits neutral ODR facilitators who communicate with the litigants for their work in that realm and for reminding the parties to bring to court the evidence they believe supports their claims. “So we actually get better-prepared people when it is time for court,” McCullagh says.

An NCSC review of Utah’s ODR system released in December 2020 confirmed the judge’s observations and highlighted that the average time to disposition for ODR cases decreased by five weeks or more for all disposition types other than dismissals.

Judges and private sector officials also report that the large backlogs many courts have in certain case types are often what prompt them to consider ODR options in the first place. Jamie Gillespie, general manager of ODR at Tyler Technologies, says the court shutdowns sparked by COVID-19 only increased the appeal of online dispute solutions in the court system realm. “Everyone realized we are going to have to do something, and this is a really good option to try to help maintain our backlog,” she says.

Along those lines, Cowan expresses hope that the LA Superior Court’s ODR platform for unlawful detainer matters, developed by TurboCourt, which it planned to launch this fall, will help the court work through a backlog of such cases due to COVID-19-related eviction moratoriums.
Adoption obstacles

Despite the ODR successes some court systems have experienced, others have struggled to successfully get their online platforms off the ground.

For example, a pilot program in Florida that got underway last year was slated to feature six judicial districts, but three of the state circuit courts involved withdrew from participating prior to launching services to the public.

The withdrawals came “after numerous delays related to the vendor’s inability to provide a functional platform,” according to a January 2021 report from the state’s Online Dispute Resolution Workgroup. Matterhorn was the vendor for the three circuits that withdrew and one of the three that moved forward with the pilot; Modria was the vendor for the other two circuits that moved ahead with the pilot.

The onset of COVID-19 also presented difficulties in Florida. “There were numerous factors that affected the outcome of the ODR pilot, including product delivery issues, lack of interest in modifying existing court processes, the prevalence of other remote alternatives to ODR such as videoconference-aided court, and stretched resources as a result of COVID-19, among others,” the Florida report said. “These outcomes reveal the need for courts to make careful assessments regarding the purpose and utility of ODR prior to implementing such a service.”

Matterhorn CEO MJ Cartwright agrees that the pandemic made it difficult for some Florida courts to implement ODR systems while simultaneously working to move other functions online.

“The courts we were working with there were overwhelmed,” she says.

However, Cartwright notes the Matterhorn platform for resolving civil traffic infractions online used by the 11th Judicial Circuit in Miami-Dade County has produced positive results. ODR users in that circuit spent an average of 6½ minutes resolving their legal issues compared with the 68 minutes non-ODR users spent, according to the Florida workgroup’s report.

Even though some courts faced challenges, the Florida Supreme Court announced in March that it was expanding the ODR pilot to all interested judicial circuits so it could gather additional information. It blamed COVID-19 and “other factors” for the initial pilots resulting in “insufficient data to fully assess ODR.”

The New York State Unified Court System also has encountered difficulties in launching ODR. Several years ago, it considered implementing ODR for consumer debt collection cases. But legal service providers “mounted an all-out assault on the project, claiming that an ODR process would put vulnerable populations at risk for careless or unscrupulous creditors,” according to a national Joint Technology Committee report. This strong resistance prompted the court system to halt its efforts in the consumer debt area and explore using ODR for a different case type, the report said.

New York ultimately decided to focus on small claims cases, and earlier this year, Manhattan’s Civil Court launched an ODR pilot program for eligible matters via the Matterhorn platform. Anthony Cannataro, who was the administrative judge of New York City’s Civil Court when the small claims ODR offering went live, acknowledges there were “growing pains” with the new online offering in its initial months. The challenges included some technological issues the court system needed to have its outside vendor address.

Cartwright says COVID-19 hindered the launch of ODR in New York, but her team was confident it could help the court with any concerns.

Cannataro, who has since become a justice on the New York Court of Appeals, also says there was minimal usage of the ODR system by litigants in the early going. He expressed hope that expanding the types of small claims cases that could be handled through ODR and offering the program in other geographic locations would boost participation.

“We are not giving up yet,” Cannataro said in the spring. “We are going to try to work out the kinks and move more cases through.”
Buyer, beware?

However, consumer advocates say courts should weigh carefully whether to implement ODR systems in the first place. They especially worry about the use of ODR in debt collection cases, which typically have an attorney representing the plaintiff and a self-represented defendant.

April Kuehnhoff, a staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center in Boston, says this power imbalance can lead to defendants feeling pressured into entering repayment agreements without raising legitimate defenses they may have. “So throwing an unrepresented party into this negotiating space online really threatens to re-create a lot of the abusive situations that happen in hallways or in courtrooms around the United States.”

Dora Galacatos, executive director of Fordham University School of Law’s Feerick Center for Social Justice, says she also has concerns that the top goal of court-sponsored ODR programs appears to be generating settlements between the parties. This can lead to consumers in debt collection cases entering into “catastrophically ill-advised” agreements even when they have strong defenses, according to Galacatos, whose center was among the groups who opposed New York’s attempt to introduce debt-collection ODR.

“I think that ODR has not promoted the fair administration of justice, which is trying to reach outcomes and adjudicate cases based on the merits of the cases,” she says.

Kuehnhoff says one way courts can address advocates’ concerns is by thinking about how the ODR platforms can be used to facilitate and strengthen consumer access to legal representation. Court systems should also involve consumer advocates in discussions about implementing ODR initiatives early in the process, rather than near the end, which Kuehnhoff says has happened in some instances.

“I think the advocates need to be there from day one,” she says.

Kate Marr, executive director of Community Legal Aid SoCal, headquartered in Santa Ana, California, says she understands and shares the consumer advocates’ worries about ODR. But she also says she thinks there is a place for online dispute resolution under the right conditions. A few years ago, her organization created an ODR platform for small claims cases filed in Orange County Superior Court, the development of which was financed by a $152,200 grant from the Legal Services Corp. The ODR platform was developed by the Justice Education Society of British Columbia.

Marr says the neutral facilitators her organization’s ODR program uses help protect against power imbalances, and many litigants have already gone through a small claims adviser initiative Community Legal Aid SoCal offers to provide more information to the public about such cases. Her organization can also connect litigants with additional resources if it feels like they are unprepared for the ODR process or would not do well using the online platform.

“I think that our ODR program has safeguards built in because it is housed at a legal aid organization,” Marr says.
Room for improvement

Even courts that have experienced some success implementing ODR programs acknowledge there are always opportunities to strengthen the consumer experience.

For example, New Mexico’s initial version of ODR for consumer debt cases required the parties to conduct negotiations through online messages on a web-based platform. In December 2020, the state courts announced that both sides in a case could also use smartphones or tablets to receive text or email updates about their online negotiations and use enhanced chat functions to communicate in real time. Additionally, defendants are now able to make an initial proposal through the ODR platform, developed by Modria, rather than having to wait for the plaintiff to make the first settlement offer.

These changes and others helped boost ODR participation numbers and generated more settlements, according to Second Judicial District Court Judge Jane Levy, who chaired a judicial group that developed the latest version of New Mexico’s ODR.

Nonetheless, on July 1, New Mexico began pausing referrals to ODR for newly filed cases. Levy says this was done so that the court system could work with its vendor to make its platform available in Spanish and possibly other languages in addition to making the system compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

“It felt like if we were really going to do this right and really figure out how to make ODR a really good tool for access to justice, we needed to step back,” Levy says. “To run ODR is to constantly try to improve it.”

Meanwhile, Utah’s court system participated in a usability evaluation of its small claims ODR platform. The review was conducted by the Innovation for Justice Program at the University of Arizona’s James E. Rogers College of Law, and the results were released in September 2020.

In light of data indicating 64% of defendants do not log in to Utah’s ODR platform after receiving a summons, the Arizona research team recommended the ODR registration process be streamlined. The report also recommended that Utah make it easier for ODR users to upload and share documents, noting the process for doing so was not intuitive.

Brody Arishita, the Utah state court system’s application services leader, said court officials welcomed the feedback and were working to implement some of the recommendations. Stacy Butler, director of the Innovation for Justice Program, commends Utah officials for being willing to engage in the usability evaluation of its ODR platform. “The only way to make it better is to learn what is not working and fix it,” she says.

Overall, Butler describes ODR as presenting both risks and opportunities for courts and other groups trying to address issues in the civil justice system. “We can take that broken system and just move into a new technology platform, or we can use the dawn of ODR as an opportunity to repair some of those breaks in the system,” she says.

This story was originally published in the October/November 2021 issue of the ABA Journal under the headline: “Lawyers and Judges Optional? Online dispute resolution promises to increase access to justice, but challenges remain.”


https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/online-dispute-resolution-promises-to-increase-access-to-justice



Monday, September 13, 2021

Anti-Tracking Law Invalidly Applied to Man Who Placed Device on Car He Co-Owned

 

Metropolitan News-Enterprise
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
By a MetNews Staff Writer

Orange Superior Court Appellate Division:

Anti-Tracking Law Invalidly Applied to Man Who Placed Device on Car He Co-Owned

Opinion Says Man Who Ascertained Whereabouts of Estranged Wife Cannot Be Criminally Liable in Light of Unconstitutional Vagueness of Statute

The Appellate Division of the Orange Superior Court has reversed the conviction of a man who ascertained the whereabouts of his estranged wife at a resort in Rancho Palos Verdes through the use of a tracking device on the car she was driving, holding the statute rendering it a misdemeanor to use such apparatus does not give a clear warning that it applies to unauthorized surveillance where the vehicle is co-owned by the defendant.

Acting Presiding Judge Terri Flynn-Peister wrote the opinion which was filed July 21, was not transferred by Div. Three of the Fourth District Court of Appeal to itself, and was publicly posted on Friday. It reverses a conviction by a jury of chiropractor Dustin Livingston Agnelli of a violation of Penal Code §637.7(a) who provides:

 “No person or entity in this state shall use an electronic tracking device to determine the location or movement of a person.”

Inapplicability to Owner

Creating a complication is the wording of Subd. (b):

“This section shall not apply when the registered owner, lessor, or lessee of a vehicle has consented to the use of the electronic tracking device with respect to that vehicle.”

Flynn-Peister recited:

“It is undisputed Agnelli and the victim are registered co-owners of the vehicle. Agnelli clearly consented to having the tracking device placed on the vehicle, but the registered co-owner did not.”

Declaring the statute to be unconstitutionally vague as applied to Agnelli, she said: “The plain language of the statute does not expressly indicate, in this situation, whether consent of all registered owners of the vehicle is required. Nor does the legislative history provide clarity….Common people of ordinary intelligence must necessarily guess, and may differ, on the application of whether consent to all registered co-owners are required to place a tracking device on a vehicle. Indeed, the lower court, counsel, and the jury were uncertain as to the application of this statute when only one co-registered owner provided consent.”

When the jury asked for guidance, Orange Superior Court Judge Joy W. Markman told counsel, outside the presence of the jury:

“Generally...in jury trials, I’m more than happy to provide legal answers to legal questions the jury has. I can’t do it on this one; I don’t have the answer.”

No Definite Guidelines

Flynn-Peister observed that §637.7 “does not provide police officers, prosecutors, and the jury with definite guidelines in order to prevent arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement” and creates “a risk that the jury will convict on a subjective basis.”

On appeal, the Office of state Attorney General conceded that there should be a reversal.

The case is People v. Agnelli, JAD21-05.

Agnelli was found not guilty by the jury of attempting to dissuade a witness from testifying and violating a protective order.

Copyright 2021, Metropolitan News Company

http://www.metnews.com/


https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/anti-tracking-law-invalidly-applied-to-man-who-placed-device-on-c

Friday, August 13, 2021

Arrested private investigator says he 'can't even sleep' after shootout with wrong guy

 


Arrested private investigator says he 'can't even sleep' after shootout with wrong guy

By Damali Keith
Published January 25, 2021
News
FOX 26 Houston

CYPRESS, Texas - A shootout in a Cypress neighborhood at 8:00 on a Saturday morning leaves one person shot, three men arrested and it’s all because of a case of mistaken identity.

For years, Frederick Randle Jr. has been a private investigator at UMMC Investigations, the company he owns, arresting fugitives who jump bail but this time he was the one arrested and charged.

"It is a nightmare," says Randle. Now the business owner who typically works with attorneys is finding himself in need of one.

"My client is sincerely apologetic. He has hired me and my team of attorneys to represent him," explains Attorney Wilvin Carter.

You see, the night before the shootout Private Investigator Randle was hired to arrest a fugitive child predator. After running surveillance and confirming with a neighbor the man lived there, Randle and his two employees went to the Cypress home, finding the homeowner outside.

"We saw him by the driveway. Then he went into the garage. My employee followed him in and my other employee followed him in and all of a sudden the garage closed on them and it trapped them inside. Then from that point, I heard gunshots," Randle explains.

Randle says the homeowner opened fire on his two employees, Licensed Private Investigators Frederic Siddique and Angel Galvan. He says Siddique ultimately shot back. Galvan was shot in the arm.

"They were behaving in a manner in relation to their training and policy provided to them by the state of Texas," says Carter.

The bounty hunters thought they were in a shootout with their fugitive but the 'wanted man' actually no longer lives there and the homeowner thought he was being robbed.

"I didn’t know that until the police department told me afterwards that it was the wrong guy and my heart just fell out the window. I really feel bad. I can’t even sleep because I’m thinking about the family, the trauma they endured, the children," says Randle.

The three private investigators were arrested.

"The charges are very serious. He, as well as, his employees are charged with Burglary of a Habitation with the Intent to Commit Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon," Carter explains. The punishment ranges from two to twenty years in prison. "We didn’t have any intent to commit any malicious act against anyone. That’s not what we do in our business. That’s not who I am. I’m a well-respected person," says Randle.
     
The homeowner, his wife, and three grandchildren who were in the house were not shot in the incident. The private investigator who was shot in the arm is expected to survive.
    
Randle’s attorney says they want to "make the family whole somehow" and they're hoping the DA’s office will review the case, realize this was not a robbery attempt and dismiss the charges.


https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/arrested-private-investigator-says-he-cant-even-sleep-after-sh

Judge Rejects Attempt to Immediately Block CDC’s Latest Eviction Moratorium

 


 The EPOCH Times

US News
Judge Rejects Attempt to Immediately Block CDC’s Latest Eviction Moratorium
By Zachary Stieber
August 13, 2021


A federal judge on Friday announced she will not immediately block the Biden administration’s latest pause on evictions.

The pause is an extension on the previous moratorium, which Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh deemed an overreach, U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump nominee, said in her 13-page ruling.

That viewing of the ban enables the judge to block it, but she said she’s prevented from doing so by previous orders from other courts, including the nation’s top one.

Friedrich in May vacated the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) eviction pause, finding the CDC lacked the legal authority to impose a nationwide moratorium. But she quickly stayed the order on the request of the government, pending appeal.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit the following month upheld the stay, asserting the Department of Health and Human Services, which includes the CDC, was likely to succeed when the case was ultimately decided.

The Supreme Court followed by refusing to overturn the ban in place at the time, in a narrow 5-4 decision in which Kavanaugh was the only justice to offer his thoughts regarding how he voted.

Kavanaugh decided to uphold the ban, but said in his concurring opinion that the CDC “exceeded its existing statutory authority by issuing a nationwide eviction moratorium” and Congress would have to act when the ban expired.

The CDC’s nationwide eviction pause expired on July 31. The agency soon issued a new moratorium, which applies to around 90 percent of the U.S. population, after Congress failed to pass an eviction pause.

Combined with the four justices who would have vacated the stay, Kavanaugh’s opinion was enough to establish that the Supreme Court would rule against any future CDC action on evictions, plaintiffs, including real estate groups, argued in their emergency motion on Aug. 4 and in court earlier this week.

Friedrich sided with the government defendants in disagreeing.

“Because the four dissenting Justices did not explain their votes, it is impossible to determine which proposed disposition—theirs or Justice Kavanaugh’s—is the ‘common denominator’ of the other,” she wrote.

While several other courts have cast doubt on the CDC’s authority to ban evictions, the Circuit Court’s upholding of the stay, taken with the Supreme Court’s decision not to end the ban, means the judge’s hands are tied, she added.

“These intervening decisions call into question the D.C. Circuit’s conclusion that the CDC is likely to succeed on the merits. For that reason, absent the D.C. Circuit’s judgment, this Court would vacate the stay. But the Court’s hands are tied. The Supreme Court did not issue a controlling opinion in this case, and circuit precedent provides that the votes of dissenting Justices may not be combined with that of a concurring Justice to create binding law,” she stated.

To lift the stay, plaintiffs must seek relief from the D.C. Circuit, she concluded.

The National Association of Realtors, which is one of the plaintiffs, told The Epoch Times in an email that plaintiffs are planning an appeal to the D.C. Circuit Court and, if necessary, the Supreme Court.

“We are confident in our position that this unlawful eviction ban will soon come to an end. Federal and state governments should be focusing all energy on the swift distribution of nearly $50 billion in rental assistance available for struggling tenants,” a spokesperson said via email.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the administration “believes that CDC’s new moratorium is a proper use of its lawful authority to protect the public health.”

“We are pleased that the district court left the moratorium in place, though we are aware that further proceedings in this case are likely,” she said in a statement.

 

 https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/judge-rejects-attempt-to-immediately-block-cdc%E2%80%99s-latest-eviction

Private investigator arrested for January child abduction: officials


Private investigator arrested for January child abduction: officials

ABC 12 News Channel
Sydney Basden
3/15/2021

A licensed private investigator in North Carolina was recently arrested on charges of abducting an infant earlier this year, the Onslow County Sheriff's Office said Monday.

Officials said they received a report on January 11 that an infant had been taken from the child's grandmother in Holly Ridge. During the investigation, the sheriff's office said deputies learned a couple had hired an attorney to assist in gaining custody of the infant, and the infant had been taken by Melanie Keene, a licensed private investigator hired by the attorney.

According to officials, Keene, 60, took the infant to the couple, reportedly doing so under the pretext that an Ex-Parte Hearing for Temporary Emergency Custody was scheduled for January 12. They added that Keene also told the couple to turn off their phones and not speak with law enforcement to prevent the child from being returned to its mother.

On Wednesday, March 10, warrants were obtained for Keene, and she was arrested March 11 in Brunswick County. The Onslow County Sheriff's Office said she has been charged with the following:

    Felony Abduction of Children,
    Felonious Restraint,
    Felony Obstructing Justice,
    Misdemeanor Resisting Public Officer.

Officials added that she was booked in the Brunswick County Detention Center with a $1,000 secured bond awaiting her first appearance.

https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/private-investigator-arrested-for-january-child-abduction-offici 

 https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/private-investigator-arrested-for-january-child-abduction-officials/ar-BB1eC30o

 

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Man found dead after plans to buy ATV from Facebook Marketplace

 Man found dead after plans to buy ATV from Facebook Marketplace


NBC12
By Debra Dolan
June 8, 2021

OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. (Gray News) - A man from Mississippi was found dead last week after planning to meet up with a seller from Facebook Marketplace.

WLOX reported Kyle Craig, 26, had a meeting scheduled to purchase a four-wheeler, something he did often, according to his sister Morgan Craig.
Family members are trying to put together the pieces after a 26-year-old Ocean Springs man was killed purchasing an ATV in Holmes County.

She said her brother was known for buying and fixing ATVs and had been using Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist to find four-wheelers for the past decade.

Kyle Craig had spoken to a seller he knew about in Holmes County and arrived around 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, which was the last time Morgan Craig said she heard from her brother.

The family tracked his phone and drove four hours to his last known location.

“We pulled up exactly on his last known location and there was my brother laying on the road murdered,” his sister said.

According to Holmes County Sheriff Willie March, Kyle Craig’s Gray Ram 2500 pickup truck and trailer were found about a mile and half apart from each other – the trailer riddled with bullet holes.

The sheriff’s department is searching for Montavious Landfair in connection to the death.

Anyone with information on Landfair’s whereabouts is asked to contact Mississippi Coast Crime Stoppers at 877-787-5898. They will pay up to $2,500 for information that leads to a felony arrest.

Three juveniles in custody for unrelated charges are also being questioned in connection to Kyle Craig’s death.

According to Holmes County Sheriff's Department, Montavious Landfair is wanted in the death of Kyle Craig, a resident of Ocean Springs.


According to media reports, Craig traveled to Holmes County to purchase a 4-wheeler. His body was found with multiple gunshot wounds. A juvenile has been arrested in this case and according to reports, more could be charged as accessories.

 IF YOU KNOW THE LOCATION OF MONTAVIOUS LANDFAIR, CONTACT CRIME STOPPERS. WE DON'T WANT YOUR NAME, JUST YOUR INFORMATION. CRIME STOPPERS PAYS UP TO $2500 cash FOR INFORMATION THAT LEADS POLICE TO MAKE FELONY ARRESTS.


To contact Crime Stoppers, download the app, P3 Tips or call 1-877-787-5898.

ALL PERSONS ARE PRESUMED INNOCENT UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY


https://www.nbc12.com/2021/06/08/man-found-dead-after-plans-buy-atv-facebook-marketplace/

Three Plead Guilty to Misuse of Social Security Numbers and Other Charges as Part of Scheme to Obtain Tax Information

United States Department of Justice
Department of Justice
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Northern District of New York


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, June 2, 2021
Three Plead Guilty to Misuse of Social Security Numbers and Other Charges as Part of Scheme to Obtain Tax Information
Stephen Mockler Impersonated Taxpayers to the IRS Using Personal Identifying Information Provided to Him by Andrew Panessa and Sabrina Scott

SYRACUSE, NEW YORK – Stephen Mockler, age 53, of Waverly, New York, Andrew Panessa, age 40, of Lake Ariel, Pennsylvania, and Sabrina Scott, age 52, of Granbury, Texas, pled guilty to charges related to their roles in a scheme to obtain confidential tax information from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

The announcement was made by Acting United States Attorney Antoinette T. Bacon and Special Agent in Charge William Kalb of the United States Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (“TIGTA”).

As part of their guilty pleas, Mockler, Panessa, and Scott admitted that Scott, while an employee of a private investigation firm in Texas, provided both Mockler and Panessa with personal identifying information about her firm’s investigative targets (including the targets’ social security numbers) and requested that Mockler and Panessa use that information to obtain confidential tax information. Mockler, who received requests for tax information from both Scott and Panessa, called the IRS and used the personal identifying information provided to him by Scott or Panessa to impersonate the taxpayer, answer the IRS’s security questions, and learn non-public information about the taxpayer. Mockler then sent that confidential tax information back to Panessa or Scott, who provided the information to the private investigation firm’s clients for a fee.

Mockler and Panessa each pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, misuse of a social number, and aggravated identity theft. Each faces a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years for each count of wire fraud and five years for each count of misuse of a social security number. The aggravated identify theft convictions require a two-year sentence to run consecutively to any term of imprisonment imposed for the wire fraud and misuse of a social security number counts. In addition, the maximum fine is $250,000, and the court could impose a term of post-imprisonment supervised release of up to three years.

Sabrina Scott pled guilty to conspiracy to misuse social security numbers and faces a maximum sentence of five years, a fine of $250,000, and a post-imprisonment term of supervised release of up to three years.

No sentencing date is currently set for Mockler or Panessa. Scott’s sentencing is scheduled for October 5, 2021. A defendant’s sentence is imposed by a judge based on the particular statute the defendant is charged with violating, the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, and other factors.

These cases were investigated by the United States Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (“TIGTA”) and are being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael D. Gadarian and Geoffrey J.L. Brown.


https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndny/pr/three-plead-guilty-misuse-social-security-numbers-and-other-charges-part-scheme-obtain?fbclid=IwAR2b6veK4H2CdexDYsmQ40EX_qQ_vDSaSjeb35wjfklAsRy0DgSla7w7PXU

 

Thursday, May 20, 2021

We Found Joe Biden’s Secret Venmo. Here’s Why That’s A Privacy Nightmare For Everyone.

 We Found Joe Biden’s Secret Venmo. Here’s Why That’s A Privacy Nightmare For Everyone.
The peer-to-peer payments app leaves everyone from ordinary people to the most powerful person in the world exposed.


Buzz Feed News
Ryan Mac
Posted on May 14, 2021

BuzzFeed News found President Joe Biden’s Venmo account after less than 10 minutes of looking for it, revealing a network of his private social connections, a national security issue for the United States, and a major privacy concern for everyone who uses the popular peer-to-peer payments app.

On Friday, following a passing mention in the New York Times that the president had sent his grandchildren money on Venmo, BuzzFeed News searched for the president’s account using only a combination of the app’s built-in search tool and public friends feature. In the process, BuzzFeed News found nearly a dozen Biden family members and mapped out a social web that encompasses not only the first family, but a wide network of people around them, including the president's children, grandchildren, senior White House officials, and all of their contacts on Venmo.

The president’s transactions are not public, and BuzzFeed News is not identifying the usernames for the accounts mentioned in this story due to national security concerns.

After BuzzFeed News reached out to the White House for this story, all the friends on the president’s Venmo account were removed. A White House spokesperson did not have an immediate comment.

After this story was published, a Venmo spokesperson told BuzzFeed News: “The safety and privacy of all Venmo users and their information is always a top priority, and we take this responsibility very seriously. Customers always have the ability to make their transactions private and determine their own privacy settings in the app. We’re consistently evolving and strengthening the privacy measures for all Venmo users to continue to provide a safe, secure place to send and spend money.”

By late Friday night, the Venmo accounts tied to the president and first lady Jill Biden were no longer online.

Privacy advocates and journalists have warned about Venmo’s privacy problems for years, yet the PayPal-owned app has persisted with features that can place people — including the president of the United States — at risk.

While many critics have focused on how the app makes all transactions public by default, Venmo’s friend lists are arguably a larger privacy issue. Even if a Venmo account is set to make payments private, its friend list remains exposed. There is no setting to make this information private, which means it can provide a window into someone’s personal life that could be exploited by anyone — including trolls, stalkers, police, and spies.

No other major social network or service has contact-based friend lists that are publicly accessible by default to anyone — and that cannot be made private. People use Venmo to get paid, often using their real names. They often also import their phone contact lists or Facebook friend lists — which the app highly encourages when you sign up — creating networks where people automatically “friend” dozens if not hundreds of other Venmo users to allow them to find people they want to pay more easily.

Venmo makes it impossible for users to hide their list of friends. To remove someone as a friend, a user has to unfriend the person manually.

Several former Venmo employees told BuzzFeed News that Venmo’s public transaction feed and friend lists were integral to the app’s early design. Launched in 2009 as a simple and free way to transfer money between friends, it relied heavily on the social dynamics pioneered on Facebook. People were unafraid to publicly share that they had paid their friends for pizza after a night out or were splitting a gas bill among their roommates.

The idea, according to one former engineer, is that building off someone’s social network was a much easier way for someone to trust who they were paying or receiving money from. Since then, the app has become one of PayPal’s main drivers of growth, clearing $51 billion in payments during the first three months of 2021.

At first glance, disclosing connections among people may seem trivial: Who cares if you know whom someone is connected to? But these public connections can be used to expose very private information. Using the public friend list, for example, a motivated fan was able to figure out who won a season of The Bachelor.

Some examples are much more serious. US government agencies like the Drug Enforcement Administration have used this feature in criminal cases, such as in the overdose death of rapper Mac Miller.

Using public friend lists and transaction feeds, BuzzFeed News found two members of Congress who were roommates in Washington, DC, as well as reporters who were on friend lists with Trump administration officials, potentially exposing their sources. BuzzFeed News has also spoken with survivors of domestic violence and abuse who suspected that former partners used Venmo to track them and therapists who use Venmo to receive payment from clients and were unaware their friend lists showed who they were working with.

Last year, Nick Cadena, then a student at Louisiana State University, told BuzzFeed News he had been the victim of an impersonation scam on Venmo. A scammer took his photo and profile details and created a similar account, and then used it to request money from Cadena’s friends. Some people completed the transactions, believing that they were paying the real Cadena.

“Venmo’s privacy failures are already a big problem for everyday folks who use Venmo, and that's been the case for years,” Gennie Gebhart, the acting activism director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights organization, told BuzzFeed News. “All of those problems are magnified when we’re talking about a major public figure.”

Ever since 1998, when Bill Clinton sent an email to then-senator John Glenn, presidents have struggled to use new technology while safeguarding national security and complying with public records laws. After months of wrangling, Barack Obama was allowed to use a personal BlackBerry while in office, Donald Trump’s Twitter account was reportedly hacked by correctly guessing his password — maga2020! — and candidate Hillary Clinton faced her own controversy after she set up a private email server at her home while she was secretary of state.

Venmo poses a new challenge, though this is not the first time a government official’s Venmo account has been easily discovered through publicly available information. In early 2017, people found White House press secretary Sean Spicer’s Venmo account and spammed it. The account of Trump's daughter Tiffany was also found. This year, transactions between Rep. Matt Gaetz and alleged sex trafficker Joel Greenberg appeared to pay three young women for “tuition” and “school.” (In an op-ed, Gaetz claimed he had “never, ever paid for sex.” Greenberg pleaded guilty to federal charges.)

Accounts belonging to celebrities have also been found, and in 2017, privacy researcher Hang Do Thi Duc created the Public by Default project, which scraped public Venmo transactions for terms and emojis commonly associated with drugs. The project revealed how much people don’t pay attention to their privacy settings, even when doing personal transactions.

Venmo’s parent company PayPal settled an FTC suit in 2018 over how it allegedly failed to properly explain its privacy settings. “We are pleased to conclude this process with the FTC in a cooperative way,” a PayPal spokesperson said at the time, and while Venmo streamlined its settings, crucially, transactions were still left public by default for new users.

President Biden’s transactions were not public, and he had fewer than 10 friends on Venmo. But he was easily verifiable by the people he was connected to, including an account that appeared to be for his wife, first lady Jill Biden. Jill Biden’s account, in turn, was linked to various aides, senior Biden staffers, and family members, including an account that appeared to be for the president's son Hunter Biden.

“For one of the most heavily guarded individuals in the world, a publicly available Venmo account and friend list is a massive security hole. Even a small friend list is still enough to paint a pretty reliable picture of someone's habits, routines, and social circles,” Gebhart said.

On Friday, the Times wrote that a Biden adviser said the president “had sent the grandchildren money using Venmo.” Some of those grandchildren are locatable on Venmo, posing an avenue for possible harassment. On the accounts for at least two extended family members, BuzzFeed News saw that the same stranger had spammed them with requests, asking them to get President Biden to give him money.

“If somebody wanted to map out the activities of the first family, they could just look at their activities on the social network and figure out what the family is up to by looking at what their associates are doing,” Vahid Behzadan, the director of the Secure and Assured Intellect Learning Lab at the University of New Haven, told BuzzFeed News. “I assume that the extended associates, like friends, grandchildren, don’t enjoy the same level of security as the first family, and so it may be easier to monitor them passively through their network.”

By finding these accounts, a person could physically stalk the president, his aides, or members of his family, creating a physical risk for the White House. There are also espionage risks. A spy or political opponent could also use this information to find out personal information about those close to the president, or to pose as a member of Biden's inner circle and communicate with the president or others under false pretenses. There are other possible consequences. A connection between a White House official and a journalist, for example, could potentially expose a whistleblower.

“This is a great example of why apps with social features should not default to allowing strangers to see each others’ data,” said Stanford University professor and former Facebook chief security officer Alex Stamos. “As we’ve seen with other products such as exercise apps, national security–sensitive information can be easily gathered by intelligence services as well as from more prosaic adversaries, such as abusive spouses and stalkers.”



https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/we-found-joe-bidens-secret-venmo

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/we-found-joe-bidens-secret-venmo
 

Thursday, May 6, 2021

Federal judge vacates CDC’s nationwide eviction moratorium

Federal judge vacates CDC’s nationwide eviction moratorium
Court rules agency lacks legal authority to impose it




The Washington Post
By Kyle Swenson
Staff Writer
May 5, 2021

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday ruled that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention overstepped its legal authority by issuing a nationwide eviction moratorium, a ruling that could affect millions of struggling Americans.

In a 20-page order, U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich vacated the CDC order, first put in place during the coronavirus pandemic under the Trump administration and now set to expire June 30.

“It is the role of the political branches, and not the courts, to assess the merits of policy measures designed to combat the spread of disease, even during a global pandemic,” the order states. “The question for the Court is a narrow one: Does the Public Health Service Act grant the CDC the legal authority to impose a nationwide eviction moratorium? It does not.”

The Biden administration has indicated it will appeal the decision. The ruling does not affect state or local eviction moratoriums. In Washington, D.C., for example, the city government’s ban on all evictions remains in place.

Landlords and property owners have consistently challenged the CDC order, arguing the policy sets an undue financial burden on business owners.

“We’ve argued from the beginning that the CDC lacked statutory authority to impose this, and we’ve had multiple courts agree with us on that,” said Luke Wake, an attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation who has represented landlords in similar cases. “Today’s decision again vindicates our argument.”

Housing advocates, however, argued the new ruling only throws more confusion into an already chaotic policy space. Despite the moratorium, evictions have continued because of loopholes and differing legal interpretations.

After Wednesday’s decision, tenants’ rights advocates called for the Biden administration not only to defend the policy but to step up legal protections that will keep people in their homes. According to the Census Bureau, 1 out of 7 renters recently reported they were behind on payments.

“While this latest ruling is written more starkly than previous ones, it likely has equally limited application impacting only the plaintiffs who brought the case or, at most, renters in the district court’s jurisdiction,” said Diane Yentel, president and chief executive of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “The [Department of Justice] should immediately appeal and the Biden administration should continue to vigorously defend and enforce the moratorium, at least until emergency rental assistance provided by Congress reaches the renters who need it to remain stably housed.”

Within hours of the decision, the Justice Department indicated that in addition to an appeal, the government planned to ask for a stay of the decision, meaning the moratorium would remain in place while the appeal was argued.

“The Department of Justice respectfully disagrees with today’s decision of the district court,” Brian M. Boynton, acting assistant attorney general for the department’s civil division, said in a statement. “In the department’s view, that decision conflicts with the text of the statute, Congress’s ratification of the moratorium, and the rulings of other courts.”

Landlords and property owners cheered the decision Wednesday. For months, industry advocates have argued that the moratorium was too harsh, hurting legitimate business owners and leaving property managers without the tools to oust problem tenants.

“Eviction moratoriums are dangerous, detrimental policies that harm housing affordability, housing providers and our residents,” Robert Pinnegar, president and chief executive of the National Apartment Association, said Wednesday. “The government must end enforcement of the CDC order and begin communications now to stakeholders, including judges, to prepare them for its ending.”

Since the moratorium’s early days, both tenants and landlords have wondered whether the action was the right policy tool for the job.

As the pandemic spread across the country, leaving economic damage and job loss in its wake, an estimated 40 million Americans were facing eviction, according to an August 2020 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the Aspen Institute Financial Security Program, and the COVID-19 Eviction Defense Project.

A month later, the CDC rolled out a moratorium halting evictions for tenants who could not meet their monthly rent obligations because of the pandemic. The order applied only to individuals making $99,000 annually, or $198,000 for couples.

But both tenants and landlords quickly found fault with the order. The policy’s wording left room for legal interpretation, giving local judges latitude to apply the moratorium as they saw fit. New guidance issued in October did little to clarify the situation, triggering a series of legal challenges by landlords.

Since last year, six federal judges have weighed in on the ban, with three ruling it illegal and three supporting its legality.

Many of the recent challenges, including the case featured in Wednesday’s decision, have hinged on the CDC’s authority. Backers of the moratorium argue that although the action is outside the typical scope of the agency, Congress’s decision to extend the moratorium in December should have been taken as a sign legislators approved.

“Congress was trying to preserve the status quo by keeping the moratorium in effect through the presidential transition,” said Eric Dunn, director of litigation for the National Housing Law Project. “Well, that implies that Congress was approving that the CDC has the authority.”

Whether the recent decision will trigger a wave of evictions is unclear, advocates say. “There are now numerous conflicting court rulings at the district court level, with several judges ruling in favor of the moratorium and several ruling against,” Yentel said.

Dunn argued that the policy has become so confused by now that the moratorium’s impact has been weakened, particularly in jurisdictions without state or local protections.

“Practically, all these decisions have already made it so the CDC protection is basically a lottery ticket for tenants,” he said. “If you qualify you can sign the declaration and it may protect you or it may not. The judge may decide it applies to you or her or she may decide it does not.”

Wednesday’s ruling came as the Biden administration is in the midst of a massive project aimed at alleviating the economic stress pressing both landlords and tenants. As part of the American Rescue Plan enacted in March, the federal government is doling out $21.6 billion to local and state governments for rental and utility relief.

That money joins the $25 billion in aid set aside in December by Congress to help renters hit hard by the pandemic’s economic consequences. Eliminating the CDC protection would hurt families at the very moment they are beginning to repay pandemic debt, argued Emily Benfer, a Wake Forest University law professor and co-creator of the COVID-19 Housing Policy Scorecard with the Eviction Lab at Princeton University.

“Without this critical public health measure, the eviction floodgates would open, placing millions of families in jeopardy, thwarting efforts to control the pandemic, and impeding $46 billion in eviction prevention assistance,” Benfer said. “We know eviction spreads covid-19, we know it disrupts access to health care and we know it’s increasing health inequity among Black and Latinx people. The moratorium stops all of these harms.”

  https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/federal-judge-vacates-cdc%E2%80%99s-nationwide-eviction-moratorium

 https://lsisinvestigations.com/blog/f/federal-judge-vacates-cdc%E2%80%99s-nationwide-eviction-moratorium

 

 

Woman loses nearly £113k in dating site romance fraud

Woman loses nearly £113k in dating site romance fraud



BBC News
05-05-2021

A woman says she is facing bankruptcy after losing just under £113,000 to a scammer she met on a dating site.

Rachel Elwell, from the West Midlands, said the man, who claimed he lived nearby, told her he had gone abroad for an engineering contract in Ukraine.

He convinced her with documents and pictures he needed money for issues that had cropped up and stated he had been taken captive by loan sharks.

Ms Elwell, 50, said there was no guarantee of any money coming back.

Asked why she had given money to a man she had never met, the export manager, of Brownhills, said: "When he said to me his life was in danger and I didn't hear from him, I thought he'd been murdered.

"Can you imagine feeling you're responsible for whether someone lives or dies?"

Ms Elwell said after he had contacted her on 1 January claiming to live in Cannock, his "picture looked nice", he "seemed to like the same things as me" and "seemed quite an open and genuine guy".
'All a lie'

The man told her they would have to wait weeks to meet as he would need to stay in Ukraine, but later phoned claiming laws in that country had changed due to Covid and he now had to pay tax before any of the engineering work began, Ms Elwell said.

Telling the story to BBC Radio WM, Ms Elwell said she had been told work had stopped on site and matters "appeared very legitimate", but later she had "reluctantly" sent him money.

She stated at one point a supposed tax office had sent a letter to him, which she had a copy of, and added: "They said... 'you need to pay 160 thousand'. So he cashed his pension in, sold his car, borrowed money and I helped him.

"I mean at this point I think it was about £45k I'd sent him to help him with the tax bill."

According to Action Fraud, romance or dating fraud is where criminals dupe people into sending them money by gaining their trust and convincing them they are in a genuine relationship.

In order to stay safe from such scams, it advises people to:

    Be suspicious of any requests for money from someone they have never met in person, particularly if they have only recently met online
    Speak to family or friends to get advice
    Perform reverse image searches on profile pictures, as they may not be genuine. A reverse image search can find photos that have been taken from somewhere else

Anyone who believes they have been a victim of romance fraud, it said, should report it to their bank immediately and to Action Fraud.

Continuing the story, Ms Elwell said the man had claimed two "heavies" had turned up and he had been locked in a cellar. He sent her pictures purporting to show him there.

She added he claimed to have been released after money had been sent, but he had told her he would not have his passport, which had been taken from him, until interest had been paid.

On the day the man told Ms Elwell he was due to fly back, 16 March, she went to Heathrow airport and got an email from supposed airport officials saying he had been arrested.

    Romance fraud on rise in coronavirus lockdown
    Romance fraudsters 'preying on lonely' in lockdown
    Latest West Midlands news

She said she had then approached Border Force officials who said, "look, it's a scam".

She went to his supposed house in Coventry to meet his daughter and housekeeper/nanny, but "no such people lived at that house".

Ms Elwell said: "It was in that moment that I knew it was all a lie."

A spokesperson for West Midlands Police said: "Rachel's case is a prime example of romance fraud, her case highlights how much these scammers affect people's lives."



https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-birmingham-56984844

 

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Woman hit by car must take responsibility for jaywalking across five-lane road, California court says

 
Woman hit by car must take responsibility for jaywalking across five-lane road, California court says

 


Legal Newsline
By Daniel Fisher
May 5, 2021

LOS ANGELES (Legal Newsline) - A California condominium complex that failed to provide enough parking spaces for visitors isn’t liable for the injuries of a woman who was hit by a car after she parked offsite and attempted to cross a busy five-lane thoroughfare, an appeals court ruled.

While landowners in some cases can be liable for accidents that occur off their property, the Second Appellate District held in an April 30 decision, plaintiff Anaeis Issakhani bears responsibility for jaywalking across the street instead of using a marked pedestrian crosswalk a short distance away.

“It was the visitor’s decision—rather than the landowner’s—to select an offsite parking space on the far side of a busy street,” the appeals court ruled.

Issakhani went to visit a friend at the Shadow Glen condominiums in Los Angeles in June 2014. She followed someone into the parking lot and drove around for two or three minutes without finding a parking spot, then drove off and parked on the other side of the five-lane street. A car hit her as she tried to cross, causing a traumatic brain injury and multiple skull fractures.

Issakhani sued in June 2016, claiming the complex owner failed to maintain the required number of parking spaces and that “created a foreseeable risk of harm” for guests. The trial court granted summary judgment, finding the condo complex didn’t owe Issakhani a duty under common law or city ordinance, and she couldn’t prove the complex caused her injuries.

The Second District upheld the dismissal. Shadow Glen was built in 1979 on land that had been rezoned from single- and two-family housing. As a condition of the change to multifamily zoning, the Los Angeles City Council passed an ordinance requiring guest parking of half a space per unit in addition to one space per unit for occupants. The project ultimately was built with 170 parking spots, 13 more than necessary, but only six were marked as “visitor” spaces.

The plaintiff argued the complex was liable because it violated the ordinance requiring 34 guest spots, and it was foreseeable visitors would park offsite and attempt to jaywalk their way back to Shadow Glen. The appeals court said that was too much of a stretch.

“Whether a duty of care exists is not a matter of plucking some immutable truth from the ether,” the appeals court observed. The main question is whether “public policy” supports it. Landowners can be held liable for injuries that occur off their property, for example, such as when an onsite parking lot encourages drivers to make a dangerous left-hand turn on a public street. But the California Supreme Court foreclosed any such duty for failing to provide enough parking in a 2017 decision, Vasilenko v. Grace Family Church, stating categorically that landowners “are not required to provide parking for their invitees.”

The appeals court cited several earlier court decisions that refused to assign liability to companies for traffic injuries plaintiffs tried to blame on lack of parking. While it is foreseeable people will attempt dangerous street crossings if they can’t park their cars on-site, the appeals court concluded, the pedestrian is ultimately responsible for what happens. To rule otherwise, the court said, would require landowners to build expensive underground garages, bulldoze part of their properties, or maybe force employees and residents to park elsewhere to accommodate visitors.

The court also rejected arguments the complex was liable for violating the city ordinance that rezoned the property for development. While some laws and ordinances establish public policies that can give rise to negligence claims if they are violated, this property-specific ordinance doesn’t suffice, the court ruled. The plaintiff’s lawyers attempted to conflate a duty of care, which is between two parties, and a standard of care, which sometimes can be established by an ordinance.


https://legalnewsline.com/stories/594243695-woman-hit-by-car-must-take-responsibility-for-jaywalking-across-five-lane-road-california-court-says





Biden's Labor Department rescinds Trump-era rule affecting gig workers

 Biden's Labor Department rescinds Trump-era rule affecting gig workers


Reuters Business News
May 5, 2021
By Nandita Bose

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden’s Labor Department on Wednesday rescinded a Trump-era rule that would have made it easier for U.S. businesses to classify workers as independent contractors instead of employees under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.

“By withdrawing the independent contractor rule, we will help preserve essential worker rights and stop the erosion of worker protections that would have occurred had the rule gone into effect,” Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said in a statement.

“Too often, workers lose important wage and related protections when employers misclassify them as independent contractors,” he said.

Shares of companies that employ gig labor such as Uber, Lyft and DoorDash immediately pared gains in pre-market trade. Uber Shares traded down 0.02 percent, Lyft was down 0.75 percent and DoorDash fell 1.27 percent in early trade.

Walsh told Reuters in an interview last week that a lot of U.S. gig workers should be classified as “employees” who deserve work benefits. His comments signaled a shift in policy and hurt stocks of companies that employ gig labor.

Gig workers are independent contractors who perform on-demand services, including as drivers, delivering groceries or providing childcare - and are one-third more likely to be Black or Latino, according to an Edison Research poll.

Walsh said in the interview that his department would have conversations in coming months with companies that employ gig labor to make sure workers have access to consistent wages, sick time, healthcare and “all of the things that an average employee in America can access.”

The rule by former President Donald Trump’s administration, finalized in early January before he left office on Jan. 20, would have hampered workers’ ability to earn a minimum wage and overtime compensation - protections offered under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

It was supposed to take effect in March, but did not because it was being reviewed by Biden’s Labor Department. The withdrawal will be effective on Thursday.

An Uber spokesman said last week that an overwhelming majority of app-based workers want to stay independent, because it allows them to work when, where and how they want with flexibility no traditional job can match.

The FLSA includes provisions that require covered employers to pay employees at least the federal minimum wage for every hour they work and overtime compensation at not less than 1-1/2 times their regular rate of pay for every hour they work over 40 in a workweek. FLSA protections do not apply to independent contractors.

“The independent contractor rule was in tension with the FLSA’s text and purpose,” the Labor Department said.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Tabloid Hired Gun Tells of Shady Hunt for Meghan Markle Scoops

 Tabloid Hired Gun Tells of Shady Hunt for Meghan Markle Scoops

The private investigator says the British tabloid The Sun paid him $2,055 in 2016 for private information about the couple, their family and friends that had been taken from a restricted database.

The New York Times
By Sarah Lyall and Mark Landler
March 18, 2021

It was the autumn of 2016, and The Sun, Britain’s most popular daily tabloid paper, was on to a juicy story: Prince Harry, the rakish younger son of Prince Charles, was dating an American actress named Meghan Markle. Royal news was dull at the time — Harry’s older brother, Prince William, was already married — so any development in Harry’s love life qualified as a major scoop.

But what was there to learn about Ms. Markle, and which of the bare-knuckled British tabloids would get there first?

The Sun’s New York-based U.S. editor turned to a trusted source for quick help: Daniel Portley-Hanks, a veteran Los Angeles private investigator known as Danno, whose résumé includes several stints in prison and decades of clandestine work for a range of clients, including several British tabloids.

Mr. Portley-Hanks logged in to TLOxp, a service with a vast database of restricted information about individuals and businesses, and pulled up a trove of details — home addresses, cellphone numbers, Social Security numbers and more — about Ms. Markle, her parents, her siblings and her ex-husband. He then sold it to the U.S. editor, James Beal, for $2,055, according to an invoice reviewed by The New York Times.

Armed with this information, The Sun jumped into high gear, producing a stream of gossipy, thinly sourced “exclusives” over the next week. One discussed how Harry, desperate to go out with Meghan after first meeting her earlier that year, “pursued her and besieged her with texts until she agreed to a date.” Another featured an unflattering interview with Ms. Markle’s half sister, Samantha, who described Ms. Markle as an ambitious, callous social climber who all but ditched her family when she became famous.

Mr. Portley-Hanks, now 74 and retired, said his data also put the Sun onto the trail of Ms. Markle’s father, Thomas Markle, a former Hollywood lighting director, who fell out with his daughter in a bitter exchange of letters and interviews that would continue to play out in the tabloids even after Ms. Markle married Prince Harry, in 2018.

Licensed private investigators like Mr. Portley-Hanks have the right to access such information on behalf of clients to use, for example, in civil and criminal cases. But it is a violation of U.S. privacy statutes for people to pass these reports on to news organizations. (U.S. news outlets can research some information on TLOxp and similar services, but only have access to a limited set of data.)

“There’s lots of things you can use these reports for — but not this,” said Paul M. Schwartz, an expert in privacy law and professor at Berkeley Law School.

A statement from TransUnion, which owns the TLOxp service, said: “Safeguarding information is TransUnion’s top priority. This individual was not permitted to share information obtained from TLOxp with any third party.”

Mr. Portley-Hanks’s role in providing information to The Sun was first uncovered by Graham Johnson, a former British tabloid reporter who now writes for Byline Investigates, an online publication financed by donations and focused on malfeasance in the British tabloids.

After the phone hacking scandal of 2011, which began with the hacking of the cellphone of a murdered 13-year-old girl and ultimately revealed the underhanded and illegal ways that British tabloids obtain their juiciest scoops, much of the British news media stopped covering the issue; Byline Reports has stayed with the topic.

The scandal and ensuing legal penalties were supposed to put an end to such practices. Rupert Murdoch, the media mogul who wields vast influence in Britain through his ownership of The Sun and The Times of London, a more respectable broadsheet newspaper, promised that his papers would no longer use private investigators — except under extraordinary circumstances and then only with permission from the top editors.

But according to Mr. Portley-Hanks, some journalists didn’t take it seriously.

At one point, The Sun “sent me a letter I had to sign that said I wouldn’t use any illegal methods to locate people or do background checks,” he said in an interview. “Then the reporters came back to me and said, ‘But if you want to get work, keep doing what you’ve been doing,’ with a nod and a wink.”

In the case of Ms. Markle, “I strongly believe that James Beal knew that what I was providing him was obtained illegally,” Mr. Portley-Hanks said in an affidavit that he provided to lawyers for Harry, who is suing the Sun and another tabloid, the Daily Mirror, on unrelated charges of phone hacking.

News Group Newspapers, which publishes The Sun, said it had made a “legitimate request” of Mr. Portley-Hanks to research details on Ms. Markle and her relatives, using databases for which he had a license. “He was instructed clearly in writing to act lawfully and he signed a legal undertaking that he would do so,” it said in a statement. The company said that it was also speaking on behalf of Mr. Beal.

None of the information supplied by Mr. Portley-Hanks raised concerns about illegal practices, the company said, adding that it did not request Ms. Markle’s Social Security number — which is more restricted information — and did not use it for any purpose.

In Britain, legal experts said, the tabloids have moved carefully since the 2011 scandal, which forced Mr. Murdoch to shut down another of his tabloids, The News of the World, and torpedoed his takeover of a satellite broadcaster, BSkyB.

“There is, at present, no evidence that has come to light that they continued any illegal activities since 2011,” said Daniel Taylor, an expert in privacy law.

But Mr. Taylor added, speaking of the tabloids, “There would have been enormous interest in Harry and Meghan, and there is no doubt they would have turned over every stone to make sure they got a competitive edge on their rivals.”

Even as The Sun was printing its early articles about the Harry and Meghan romance, the Sunday Express and other competitors were getting scoops of their own, fanning out across America to talk to anyone remotely connected to Ms. Markle. They staked out houses; they bombarded distant relatives with phone calls; they talked to neighbors; they quoted unnamed “friends” and “pals” of the couple.

Typical of the coverage was an article in The Daily Mail that, loaded with racist innuendo, said that the biracial Ms. Markle was “(Almost) Straight Outta Compton,” and described the L.A. neighborhood where her Black mother lived as full of “tatty one-story homes” and riddled with drugs, guns, gangs and violence.

The Mail article, and the various articles in The Sun, appeared in the first week of November, 2016. Days later, Prince Harry’s office issued an extraordinary statement declaring that Ms. Markle had been “subject to a wave of abuse and harassment” and that “nearly every friend, co-worker and loved one in her life” had been pursued, and in some cases offered money for interviews, by members of the British news media.

The couple have been at war with the tabloids ever since. In addition to Harry’s lawsuit, Meghan filed her own suit against the publisher of the Mail on Sunday, accusing it of violating her privacy by publishing an anguished letter she sent to her estranged father. In February, a High Court in London ruled in her favor.

On Thursday, Harry and Meghan, who are also known as the duke and duchess of Sussex, said in a statement that Mr. Portley-Hanks’ claims showed “that the predatory practices of days past are still ongoing, reaping irreversible damage for families and relationships.”

Harry has often blamed the tabloids for the death of his mother, Princess Diana, who was killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997 after a high-speed pursuit by paparazzi. He even attributed his and Meghan’s decision to withdraw from royal duties and leave Britain in part to the unrelenting scrutiny of the news media.

“We all know what the British press can be like, and it was destroying my mental health,” Harry said to the British talk-show host, James Corden, last month. “I was, like, this is toxic. So, I did what any husband and what any father would do — I need to get my family out of here.”

He and Meghan made similar claims in their explosive interview with Oprah Winfrey earlier this month. Mr. Portley-Hanks, who said he had already come to regret his actions, said those comments deepened his sense of remorse for his role in helping to steer the tabloids to Ms. Markle and members of her family.

“I just realized what I was doing was wrong,” he said in an interview from California. “My income was based on other people’s tragedy.”

Mr. Portley-Hanks’ misgivings coincided with his own legal troubles. In July 2017, he was convicted of extortion, and sentenced to 16 months in prison, for his involvement in an illegal gambling organization. Initially hired to run background checks, Mr. Portley-Hanks was paid $7,000 to deface a family grave site in Pennsylvania to intimidate a person who owed money to the gambling ring.

Now out of jail and stripped of his private investigator’s license, Mr. Portley-Hanks is eager to explain the tricks of his trade — honed over two decades when he worked for two American tabloid TV shows, “A Current Affair” and “Hard Copy,” as well as a contractor for numerous British tabloid papers.

Mr. Portley-Hanks claims to have been involved in unearthing or spreading many of the tabloid era’s most sensational stories, from Heidi Fleiss, the “Hollywood Madam” whose high-end prostitution ring had a prominent clientele, to Amy Fisher, the “Long Island Lolita,” who shot and wounded the wife of her lover, Joey Buttafuoco.

He insists he thought little about the people whose privacy he was invading and did not even read the stories that emerged from his tips. His employers gave him names to run through his databases, and he ran them.

“My relationship with tabloid media was purely about my pocketbook,” he said, adding that “Meghan Markle’s name didn’t mean anything to me. I had no idea she was connected to the royal family.”

Anna Joyce contributed research from London and Alain Delaqueriere from New York.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/18/world/europe/the-sun-meghan-markle-harry.html