Some of these legal actions have come at the expense of Florida taxpayers who have demanded the information vital to their own decision making about their children and elder parents.
Now, several media groups that sued last year for documents to gauge the state’s efforts combating the coronavirus and thought they had reached an understanding with the Department of Health are frustrated over the lack of response to the latest round of requests for vaccine information.
“We have seen significant delays and huge fees that in practice result in a denial of public records,” said Pam Marsh, a former top federal prosecutor and president of the nonprofit, nonpartisan First Amendment Foundation of Florida.
Free speech, accountability experts question court ruling that shields cops names after some shootings
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Apr 6, 2021 5:10 PM Tallahassee, FL - Siding with a union that represents law-enforcement officers, a state appeals court on Tuesday unanimously decided that a constitutional amendment expanding victims’ rights can shield the identities of police officers who were threatened in use-of-force incidents. The decision by a three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal came in a lawsuit filed on behalf of two Tallahassee police officers who maintained that, as victims, they were entitled to privacy protections included in the 2018 constitutional amendment known as “Marsy’s Law.” The lawsuit was the first major test of whether Marsy’s Law conflicts with a decades-old government-in-the-sunshine amendment that enshrined in the Florida Constitution some of the nation’s broadest public-records laws. But in Tuesday’s 13-page decision, Judge Lori Rowe wrote that no conflict exists. Nothing in the 2018 constitutional amendment “excl
Police identities are protected under Florida’s Marsy’s law, appeals court rules
‘Marsy’s Law’ designed to protect crime victims
Dara Kam, Senior reporter, News Service of Florida
Published:
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Siding with a union that represents law-enforcement officers, a state appeals court on Tuesday unanimously decided that a constitutional amendment expanding victims’ rights can shield the identities of police officers who were threatened in use-of-force incidents.
The decision by a three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal came in a lawsuit filed on behalf of two Tallahassee police officers who maintained that, as victims, they were entitled to privacy protections included in the 2018 constitutional amendment known as “Marsy’s Law.”
Florida appeals court ruling gives police officers âMarsyâs Lawâ protections
âTodayâs decision was an unfortunate setback for police accountability,â a Tampa lawyer for media organizations said.
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Siding with a union that represents law-enforcement officers, a state appeals court on Tuesday unanimously decided that a constitutional amendment expanding victimsâ rights can shield the identities of police officers who were threatened in use-of-force incidents. [ Photo illustration by ASHLEY DYE and MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE | Times ]
By News Service of Florida
Published 2 hours ago
Updated 2 hours ago
TALLAHASSEE Siding with a union that represents law-enforcement officers, a state appeals court on Tuesday unanimously decided that a constitutional amendment expanding victimsâ rights can shield the identities of police officers who were threatened in use-of-force incidents.
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