Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner

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Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner

Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner

@KnowlesGardner

🇺🇦 Research Director @InstFreeSpeech; Marathon🏃‍♀️; 🐱 Mom; Wife of disabled veteran; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 by birth 🇺🇸 by choice; Mariners fan! Opinions my own

Clinton, NY Katılım Haziran 2018
358 Takip Edilen473 Takipçiler
Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner retweetledi
Institute for Free Speech
Institute for Free Speech@InstFreeSpeech·
Louisiana Illuminator highlights IFS Research Director @KnowlesGardner's report on state disclosure of contributions to candidates. Read her full report, and the article, below.
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Thomas Berry
Thomas Berry@Thomas_A_Berry·
Coming out of this argument, it seems @mmfa is very likely to win on the two crucial questions in this appeal: Can they challenge their Civil Investigative Demand (CID) in federal court without going through administrative processes first, and can they show that the CID was more likely than not issued as a result of retaliation for their speech. Not surprisingly, @NAGZelinsky did an outstanding job representing Media Matters. The judges on the panel were very skeptical of the government's argument that the recipient of a CID must simply wait for the government to enforce it and then challenge that enforcement before the @FTC first, before being allowed in federal court. As Judge Millett put it, that would require an organization to simply wait while a "Sword of Damocles" hangs over its head and while it suffers real harm in being prevented from fully operating as a newsgathering operation. And all three judges seemed convinced that at the very least, the district court did not clearly err in finding as a factual matter that the CID was issued as retaliation for Media Matters's article. While Judge Katsas seemed open to the idea of imposing some higher standard beyond just a preponderance of the evidence for finding that a CID was issued as retaliation for speech, the government had to acknowledge that no precedent supported any such higher standard in this context. It is likely that the injunction against the FTC will be affirmed by the panel, which would be a win for free speech and a blow against the use of burdensome information requests as a tool of government intimidation.
Thomas Berry@Thomas_A_Berry

I'm at the DC Circuit this morning to watch oral arguments in @mmfa v. @FTC, an important First Amendment case that once again demonstrates how the Trump administration has used various tools of government to chill and suppress the speech of political opponents. In 2023, Media Matters reported that ads for at least five major brands had appeared “next to posts that tout Hitler and his Nazi Party on X.” In response, @elonmusk promised to file “a thermonuclear lawsuit against Media Matters.” Mr. Musk’s suits have been unsuccessful, but others soon took up the mantle. First, multiple state attorneys general attempted to issue civil investigative demands (CID) to Media Matters, but those efforts were blocked in the courts. Meanwhile, President Trump appointed a vocal critic of Media Matters, @AFergusonFTC, to be the new chairman of the FTC. Soon after the state CIDs were blocked, the FTC issued a burdensome CID of its own to Media Matters. The effects of this federal CID on Media Matters have been severe. Media Matters has curtailed reporting, and other organizations have avoided collaborating with it. Media Matters then sued the FTC, arguing that this CID was issued as retaliation against Media Matters for its speech criticizing Musk and X. A federal district court agreed with Media Matters and preliminarily enjoined the FTC from enforcing the CID. Now the case is in the D.C. Circuit, where @CatoInstitute has filed an amicus brief in support of Media Matters. In our brief, we outline the historical role of the First Amendment and the freedom of the press that it protects. Since the Founding, our courts have advanced press freedoms, and the First Amendment has evolved to protect the people from both explicit after-the-fact punishment for speech and coercive governmental threats of potential punishment for speech. The latter type of violation, known as “jawboning,” can be harder to identify than retaliation. But it is just as pernicious. As our brief explains, this case involves not just explicit retaliation (the burdensome CID itself) but also several instances of jawboning. Ferguson and other soon-to-be FTC officials made several statements in the run-up to issuing the CID that threatened not just Media Matters but other watchdog organizations. When Mr. Ferguson was vying to be Chairman, he said he had a “track record of standing up to … the radical left” and would “investigate … advertiser boycotts.” Although jawboning violates the First Amendment, the Supreme Court has not laid out a clear framework to guide lower courts in identifying it. In our brief, we argue that the D.C. Circuit should use Justice Alito’s framework from his dissent in Murthy v. Missouri, which urged that courts should focus on the public officials’ authority, the statements they have made, and the reaction of those who have been jawboned. But even if the court takes a more holistic approach, the result should be the same conclusion: the FTC’s actions are unconstitutional. Because FTC officials both threatened Media Matters for its speech and then followed through on those threats, the D.C. Circuit should affirm the lower court’s decision and block enforcement of the CID. When federal agencies attempt to chill speech and dilute the Constitution’s guarantees, the courts should not shy away from stopping them.

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Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner retweetledi
Institute for Free Speech
Institute for Free Speech@InstFreeSpeech·
🚨NEW Free Speech Argument podcast: Can Government Retaliate Against Critics by Launching an Investigation and Demanding Documents? (Media Matters for America v. Federal Trade Commission) ifs.org/podcast/free-s…
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Alex Mayer
Alex Mayer@alexmayer34·
Logan Gilbert: 150th career G and Astros finished with 1-5-0 “line”. First AL pitcher to go 7+ IP in 150th G & opposing team finish with identical line since Steve Sparks on Aug. 20, 2001. Both were at T-Mobile Park & Sparks was here today as Astros broadcaster! 😆 #TheMayerGWS
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Adam Jude
Adam Jude@A_Jude·
Ichiro blamed a certain Yankees closer for the statue’s broken bat.
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Pink Floyd 💎
Pink Floyd 💎@Just_pinkfloyd·
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Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner
Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner@KnowlesGardner·
Spending the morning doing what I love, taking photographs at a local running race.
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Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner
Dr. Helen J. Knowles-Gardner@KnowlesGardner·
On this date last year, I had to rush my husband to the VA emergency room fearing he had had a stroke (he hadn’t). But that began six months of serious cognitive issues for him, a nightmare for both of us. One year later, I think it’s appropriate that it is Easter, and he and I can reflect upon how blessed we are that he is recovered.
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Anthony Sanders
Anthony Sanders@IJSanders·
Hardly the biggest news to come out of SCOTUS's opinion in Chiles v. Salazar, which just dropped, but it seems Justice Gorsuch is not a fan of either "cleaned up" OR the Bluebook's "citation modified."
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Alex Mayer
Alex Mayer@alexmayer34·
Luis Castillo in four career @Mariners starts in sub 50° degree weather: 0.00 ERA, an amazing 0 runs allowed (!!!) in 27 innings pitched. Last name of opposing starting pitcher tonight? Weathers. 🥶🥶🥶 #TheMayerGWS
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Tom Garrett
Tom Garrett@TomGarrettIFS·
NEW @InstFreeSpeech amicus brief in Freedom Path v. IRS urges the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to adopt a clear, constitutional rule for evaluating 501(c)(4)s—and to keep the IRS out of regulating political speech. Details HERE: ifs.org/cases/freedom-…
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