Sexual assault. Marianne rafferty is live with a fight that is escalating across the country. Marianne good evening. Reporter good evening trace. In his opinion temporarily blocking rules j David F Bowman says he hopes the state and School Boards can negotiate in good faith and strike a balance between protecting transgender students and the rights of parents to bring up their kids. Three School Districts in Monmouth County were sued by the state back in june after adopting policies that require teachers and staff to inform a parent if their child wanted to use pronouns or School Facilities that did not conform to their sex at birth. That injunction is temporary while the larger case plays out in the states civil rights division. Temperature attorney representing the Marlboro Board Of Education saying that process could take years. In the meantime he writes the School District is now severely constrained in its ability to notify parents about important issues involving their minor chil
doing. right? they think that they can continue to pay leadership service to this. and, look, i ll say this. i m glad that they re at least speaking tough, because, let s be honest, they haven t been talking tough for a while now. so that s one step in the rise direction. but if you re just going to release them afterwards when they re committing these kinds of crimes and stealing such high value items in sufficient a significant way terrorizing people while you re doing it, it doesn t fit. it doesn t make sense you re just going to release them. let s just say the guy shows up, what happens next? because i guarantee you they re going to plead down, it s going to go into some restorative justice program and no one s going to see jail time. trace: nope, nobody s going to see jail time. your show kind of broke and we re going to show the surveillance thing and you write the following, denise yep is writing for federal way city council on a campaign of protecting businesses from crime b
today. the chief justice alone gets to appoint all of the judges, all 11 of the judges, who serve on one very important secret court. the foreign intelligence surveillance court, fisa. that s the court that essentially authorizes the government to conduct top-secret surveillance operations. this is the court that gives the nsa the okay to do things like, say, collect huge amounts of telephone metadata that the government doesn t really admit to in public. the fisa court is really, really powerful and secret. and this one guy, the chief justice of the court, gets to decide who sits on that court. he appoints all of the judges for that court. everything about that court is don in secret. the judges meet in secret, they discuss cases in secret, they make their rulings in secret. nothing is done publicly in this court. and no one involved in the court proceedings, this is important, presents the other side of the argument. there s nobody in those secret court proceedings, representing the
everything about that court is done in secret. the judges meet in secret, they discuss cases in secret, they make their rulings in secret. nothing is done publicly in this court. and no one involved in the court proceedings, this is important, presents the other side of the argument. there s nobody in those secret court proceedings, representing the public, for example. i mean, the government goes to this court and says, we want to do this surveillance thing, and then the judge just decides whether or not that s legal. nobody s appointed to make the other side of the case. nobody s appointed to argue against the government s request for more surveillance. after all of the disclosures this year from nsa whistle-blower, edward snowden, there was some talk that maybe that aspect of the fisa court would change. maybe president obama would make the fisa court an adversarial process. he would add a layer to the court, essentially. a permanent advocate for the public and for privacy rights, t
on this? 25 years plus. because they went into the store so they are in trouble. now, katherine russell, she s the widow of tamerlan, the guy who was shot to death and then run over by his brother in a are ka. here she is. she s a convert to islam. uh-huh. and apparently the fbi has a phone call when tamerlan was on the run called her and they chatted and this is the nsa surveillance thing. this is what they can do. at work. right. so they got some kind of call. the odds are that this woman was going to be charged. she s got a whole team who represents her. if all they have right now is a call but not the substance of that call. there was no tap or anything like that, it s going to be hard for them to show. i m just saying if, it s going to be hard for them to show. it says here that they have some information against her. right. so she could be charged, radio it?