Credit WAER file photo The New York Civil Liberties Union says it will appeal a decision by a judge to reject its lawsuit against the Syracuse Police Department for denying access to records pertaining to complaints of police misconduct. The NYCLU claims the previously secret records are now authorized to be publicly disclosed pursuant to a freedom of information request following the repeal of section 50a of state civil rights law. Senior Staff Attorney Bobby Hodgson says the judge seems to have based his decision on a previously existing FOIL exemption.
This decision has adopted the Syracuse Police Department s argument that as a blanket categorical matter, any complaint against a police officer that didn t result in discipline, the release of any portion of the complaint would constitute an invasion of privacy.
NYCLU files lawsuit against Freeport over police misconduct records newsday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SU’s Class of ’21 makes it to the finish line; plus, Covid shots for kids coming soon (Good Morning CNY for May 7)
Updated May 07, 2021;
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Flights of mules are also available at Second Chance.
Jane Marmaduke Woodman
DINING OUT REVIEW; THE SECOND CHANCE DINER: When you think of diners, you probably don’t think about flights of mimosas or mules (above), but that’s just the start of the surprises at the Second Chance Diner in Camillus. Read the full review. (Jane Marmaduke Woodman photo)
Coronavirus Update
SU’s Class of ’21 makes it to the finish line: Last summer, Syracuse University invited back 23,000 students and 5,000 employees for a year of uncertainty. Families and students wondered if it was worth the hefty price tag to sit in a dorm room watching a professor on the screen. Kids doubted it would last. They packed like it was a two-week vacation. No one thought they would make it to the end of the year. They did. Here are their stories.
ALBANY - Gov. Andrew Cuomo has signed legislation giving people convicted of a felony the right to vote once they’ve been released from incarceration, building on a 2018 executive order restoring the right for many people on parole.
Cuomo s signing of the legislation this week was hailed by criminal justice advocates and legislators who said that barring people from the process harkened back to segregation and continued to disenfranchise people of color.
“With today s expansion of voting rights, we realize a principle that our segregation-era laws have sought to deny: every citizen has equal worth and deserves the right to vote,” said Assemblyman Danny O Donnell, D-Manhattan.
SOUTH ROYALTON A federal court judge has granted artist Sam Kerson more time to make his case against Vermont Law School’s plan to cover with acoustic tiles a pair of murals he painted almost three decades ago that members of the VLS community now.