National Stories
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey refuses to make public emails and other documents that might show if he took part in his office’s lawsuit against a drug companythat Morrisey’s wife lobbies for in Washington, D.C. The drug distributor, Dublin, Ohio-based Cardinal Health, contributed to Morrisey’s inauguration party last year, and the company’s executives wrote checks to Morrisey’s campaign — before, as well as after, the November 2012 election. The lawsuit, which Morrisey inherited from ousted Attorney General Darrell McGraw, alleges that Cardinal Health helped fuel Southern West Virginia’s problem with prescription drugs by shipping an excessive number of pain pills to the region.
Charleston Gazette
The Justice Department’s practice of making bulk requests for email in criminal investigations has come under fire from a pair of federal judges who say the volume of irrelevant information swept up poses an intrusion into Americans’ privacy. In the past year, U.S. magistrate judges John Facciola in Washington, D.C., and David Waxse in Kansas City, Kan., have rejected or modified a number of applications for warrants to search people’s emails and other electronic communications at Internet firms such as Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc.
Wall Street Journal
Journalists and members of the public would no longer have access to court documents in cases where the defendant avoided conviction under a measure passed 18-1 by the Alaska Senate. The bill is among the latest attempts by state lawmakers to restrict access to court case records, particularly electronic documents, in balancing the rights of those charged with crimes against the free flow of information in a democracy. The Alaska bill, now pending in the House, would bar access by the public to court records in criminal cases in which defendants are acquitted or charges are dismissed. The records are now open to anyone in an online database called CourtView and at Alaska’s courthouses, said Andrew Sheeler, a board member of the Alaska Press Club and a police, courts and city beat reporter for the Ketchikan Daily News.
Poynter
The largest school district in Idaho has banned from its curriculum an award-winning bookabout the struggles of a Native American teenager after complaints by parents that the novel was rife with profanity, racial epithets and anti-Christian rhetoric. The school board in Meridian, Idaho, voted 2-1 this week to keep the book, "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian," off a supplemental reading list for 10th graders, meaning it will not be part of the curriculum at the high school, said school board clerk Trish Duncan.
Reuters
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