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Pro-Palestine Activists Urge New Hampshire Voters To Write In 'Cease-Fire'

President Joe Biden may not be on the ballot, but progressives hope that his embrace of Israel's war in Gaza will be.

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Pro-Palestine Activists Urge New Hampshire Voters To Write In 'Cease-Fire'

President Joe Biden may not be on the ballot, but progressives hope that his embrace of Israel s war in Gaza will be.

Israel
Boston
Massachusetts
United-states
South-carolina
Gaza
Israel-general
East-concord
New-hampshire
Tel-aviv
West-bank
Gaza-strip

Poll: Trump Leads Primary Field by Double Digits in New Hampshire

Police Transparency In The Spotlight During N.H. Senate Hearing

By Ethan Dewitt - Concord Monitor • Jan 19, 2021 Credit Courtesy Three months after the New Hampshire Supreme Court delivered a transformative ruling over government personnel practices, including police disciplinary records, state lawmakers are considering creating new laws around them. At a state Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday, members of the public testified on Senate Bill 39, which would bar public access to police officers’ personnel files. Senate Bill 39 would directly exempt any information in an officer’s personnel file from becoming public under the New Hampshire right-to-know law, which allows citizens to request and receive government documents. Currently, police personnel files can only be disclosed if there is a compelling public interest, a determination that can only be made by a judge.

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Police transparency in the spotlight during Senate hearing

Police transparency in the spotlight during Senate hearing A police recruit simulates a night time traffic stop under the eye of a New Hampshire Police Academy instructor inside the building at NHTI campus recently. GEOFF FORESTER Published: 1/19/2021 4:51:06 PM Three months after the New Hampshire Supreme Court delivered a transformative ruling over government personnel practices, including police disciplinary records, state lawmakers are considering creating new laws around them. At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday, members of the public testified on Senate Bill 39, which would bar public access to police officers’ personnel files. Senate Bill 39 would directly exempt any information in an officer’s personnel file from becoming public under the state’s right-to-know law, which allows citizens to request and receive government documents. Currently, police personnel files can only be disclosed if there is a compelling public interest, a determination that can o

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Gregory-sullivan
Cordell-johnston
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