Posts by Associated Press:
Mich. appeals court: Pastor can’t testify about teen’s confession
Judges say allowing minister’s testimony in sexual-assault case would violate state evidence rule that classifies certain admissions as confidential if clergy hear them in context of their work.
Calif. may ban gay-teen ‘conversion’ therapy
Bill supporters say such treatments are ineffective and harmful, but some religious groups and other critics say ban would infringe on free-speech and parental rights.
2nd Tenn. county restricts teen novel over sex scene
Newspaper reports that Looking for Alaska is the first to be stripped from the classroom reading list in Sumner County in several years.
Soccer coach in hot water for trashing 150 copies of college newspaper
Central Connecticut’s Shaun Green says he threw out stacks of The Recorder because he was upset over an article detailing his team’s failure to qualify academically for next season’s NCAA tournament.
7th Circuit blocks enforcement of Ill. eavesdropping law
Decision is a victory for activists who had feared that recording police activity during upcoming NATO summit demonstrations could land protesters and bloggers behind bars.
N.Y. high court: Just viewing child porn not state crime
Dismissing two counts against former college professor, court says he was properly convicted for downloads but that images he merely viewed could not be held against him.
Muslim woman wins $5M in workplace-harassment case
Missouri jury sides with former AT&T employee who says she was harassed for years after converting to Islam.
Neb. students to keep graduation prayer
‘The current artificial “private” graduation simply doesn’t pass the laugh test, and sadly leaves some students feeling excluded from their own graduation,’ says ACLU official.
Twitter complies with Va. police request on posts
Norfolk police seek information on assault against two Virginian-Pilot news reporters by a mob last month.
Texas again barred from cutting funds to Planned Parenthood
5th Circuit lifts stay on lower court injunction, saying state hasn’t shown that it will be irreparably harmed by holding off on enforcing new law until trial can be held.
20 activists found guilty in protest of NYC police policy
Demonstrators, including Cornel West, stood in front of a Harlem police precinct, carrying signs and chanting slogans opposing stop-and-frisk tactic.
Colo. boy, 6, suspended for reciting ‘I’m sexy’ lyric
D’Avonte Meadows, a first-grader at Sable Elementary School, is accused of sexual harassment and disrupting other students.
AP apologizes for firing reporter over WWII scoop
In 1945, correspondent Edward Kennedy broke an embargo and reported Germany’s surrender when it was clear the delay demanded by the military was for political reasons, not troop safety.
Ten Commandments dispute heads to court in Va.
High school student says the posting of the Decalogue ‘makes me feel like an outsider because the school is promoting religious beliefs that I do not share.’
Fla. governor putting some state e-mails online
Rick Scott’s decision to post messages by him, some of his top staff comes nearly nine months after he ordered probe of how and why e-mails he wrote before he became governor were deleted.













