September 23, 2020
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Two bills aimed at bringing more transparency to the Virginia Parole Board won bi-partisan support in the Senate but died Tuesday at the hands of Democrats in the House of Delegates. The bills, proposed by GOP senators upset by the board’s recent parole decisions, would have required board members to begin voting publicly and begin releasing monthly reports detailing who the board considered for release and why they decided to grant or not grant parole.
Virginia Mercury
A nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting downtown Richmond is pulling back on its plans to create a Black Lives Matter mural spanning nearly 200 feet in the 800 block of East Grace Street. After approving Venture Richmond’s application for the temporary mural just outside of the Virginia Capitol in August, the Richmond Planning Commission met in closed session earlier this month to discuss the “legal consequences” that might result from the project proceeding. The commission voted Monday to authorize the nonprofit’s withdrawal of its request. Matthew Ebinger, a city planner and the secretary to the Planning Commission, declined to specify what legal issues were discussed during the commission’s recent closed session. In an interview last week, Marrs said that the city permitting a mural on a public right of way would turn it into a public forum. He said that would mean the city cannot object to any proposed mural on the basis of its message no matter how extreme or objectionable — as long as it doesn’t directly advocate for violence.
Richmond Times-Dispatch
The New York Times is asking a Lynchburg judge to dismiss a defamation suit filed by Liberty University over the paper’s coverage of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the school. In July, the conservative religious institution sued the outlet, accusing the paper and a reporter of crafting a “clickbait” story intended to mislead the public about an outbreak on the school’s sprawling campus. In court documents filed last week, lawyers for The Times deny the allegations raised in the suit and argue that the paper’s actions are protected under state and federal law. Lawyers for The Times declined to comment Tuesday. A spokesperson for the paper has said the outlet stands by its reporting and intends to fight the suit in court.
The News & Advance
Iowa City Press-Citizen
A federal judge on Tuesday kept alive a citizen muckraker’s quest to pry loose for the public’s benefit tens of thousands of FBI documents about disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, including his time as a government informant. Self-styled public information crusader Angela Clemente sued in May, seeking to force the FBI to release the documents on the grounds that Epstein is now dead, albeit under mysterious circumstances, and that there is an overarching public interest in releasing documents. The Justice Department, representing the FBI, is fighting the effort. In a status hearing Tuesday morning, Judge Trevor N. McFadden, who sits on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, allowed Clemente’s public-records lawsuit to continue. But he also put both sides on notice that he expected some agreement when they come before him again on Oct. 23.
The Bakersfield Californian