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North End development dispute becomes test of state free-speech law before Supreme Judicial Court

On Monday, the Supreme Judicial Court hears arguments in a case that pits a North End developer against a resident who wrote about issues with his projects for a neighborhood newspaper.

Developer Steven Fustolo is suing Fredda Hollander for defamation, alleging that articles Hollander wrote for the Regional Review in 2006 so turned the neighborhood against him he was forced to cancel projects.

Hollander, who helped found the North End Waterfront Residents' Association, is attempting to get the suit thrown out under the state law against "strategic lawsuits against public participation," which is supposed to protect residents and civic groups against ruinous lawsuits by large corporations just for speaking up on their projects before government boards.

A lower-court judge rejected Hollander's argument, saying Fustolo's suit was solely about her role as a reporter and so exempt from the anti-SLAPP law because it only addresses a citizen's "right to petition" under the US and state constitutions.

In his brief to the SJC, though, Hollander's lawyer argues that newspaper articles can and do serve as "petitioning activity" covered by the law, by encouraging public participation at hearings:

Hollander's activity - "purposive" activity - fits most comfortably within petitioning intended to stir or "enlist public participation" and to "encourage consideration" of matters by governmental actors, by seeking to address or expose those matters in the press, by covering the antagonists, and by "connecting the dots," as a good reporter might do. Petitioning activity, accordingly, comes in many shades and embraces far more than the furnishing of information or comment directly to a governmental agency.

In their rebuttal, Fustolo's lawyers basically argue: Poppycock. They say Review publisher Phil Orlandella hired Hollander to provide factual reports of neighborhood meetings, not to promote her own personal views:

In authoring the five purportedly factually based news articles about the Fustolo Properties, Hollander was in no way exercising her own right to petition. As Hollander admits, she was a jourhalist for the Regional Review, covering land use and development issues in the North End community. Hollander had no personal stake in any of the Fustolo Properties that she wrote about and was not personally affected by the outcome of any of the projects. She was not attempting to address a wrong that she herself suffered or otherwise petitioning on her own individual behalf. Rather she was acting in her capacity as a reporter and purported to be writing objectively about issues of general public interest.

The Amercan Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, the Citizen Media Law Project and the Boston Bar Association's Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights under Law filed a brief in support of Hollander, arguing that simple employment by a newspaper is not enough to strip a citizen of her rights under the anti-SLAPP law and that the law does not specify newspapers as exempt, only that people seeking its protection need to be engaged in "petitioning activity," and that newspapers can qualify because:

Newspapers, through their reporters, engage in news reporting to influence, inform, and bring about governmental consideration of issues and to foster public participation in order to effect such consideration.

Briefs:
Hollander.
Fustolo.
Hollander's reply to Fustolo.
ACLU and others.

You can watch the oral arguments in the case (click on the "Webcast" link). Hearings begin at 9 a.m.; this case is listed as the second to be heard.


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Mass. Republicans have the best attack ads

The latest is from Scott Brown. Not quite up there with Jack E. Robinson's "Vote Out the Lynch-pin" or Christy Miho's walking-butts ads, but on such short notice, it'll do:

In case you missed them, here are Robinson's and Mihos's contributions to the ouevre:


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Say, you don't usually hear about trucks crumpling under bridges on Memorial Drive

Wicked Local Cambridge reports on an incident involving the driver of a truck from a shredding company shredding off the top of his truck on Thursday.


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Law firm hoards anti-flu drug

The Globe reports that Ropes & Gray bought up enough Tamiflu to hand out to all its employees for them and their families.

Or as Above the Law puts it, who knew lawyers in expensive suits were as at high risk as young children, pregnant women and people with immune disorders?

... The old, the young, and the weak become seriously ill from swine flu. Hypochondriacs take swine flu medication. Swine flu gets stronger. Humane reason = Epic Fail. ...


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Dorchester's 'kissing bandit' wanted for attempted rape at Brookline T stop

Yesterday, Boston Police reported a man arrested after he was spotted sitting in some woman's lap by her boyfriend was wanted on unspecified warrants.

Channel 4 reports one of those warrants was for an attempted rape near the Brookline Village T stop in 2007. In that incident, Samuel Prado allegedly chatted the woman up from Government Center to Brookline Village, then attacked her as they both left Brookline Village. Channel 4 says he was released on bail, then never showed up in court.

After the Brookline arrest, the Globe described him as "a homeless drifter," who drifted up here from New York because Boston was "quieter."


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Tip for girls: Only give out fake numbers that don't actually work

Annelise reports some chick in Atlanta who can't actually say no to the boys who want the digits is giving out her phone number up here in the Boston area. Like Lil' B and his crew:

... I'm keeping my phone on at night because my sister is extremely pregnant and I want to be woken up if she goes into labor. I do not appreciate Lil' B texting and calling me all night long. ...


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The religious significance of the World Series

Turns out that one of Wellesley's two rabbis is from New York, while the other is from Pennsylvania. They have a bet.


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Metro: Service journalism at its finest

Boston's largest, most award-winningest newspaper has a handy tip for Beacon Hill parents on Halloween: "Wash any loose rat droppings from your kid's candy before ingesting."

Also alerts us that lots of college students live on Mission Hill and that drug users have been known to frequent Central Square.


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Science tackles the Red Line and why buses travel in packs

Why Does Public Transport Not Arrive on Time? The Pervasiveness of Equal Headway Instability.

Although the paper attempts a generalized discussion of the issue, it specifically mentions the MBTA's attempt to deal with the problem by periodically running express Red Line trains.

Via Mike the Mad Biologist.


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Framingham on the hoof

One brave little dog tries to stop stampede as cows moove out in search of greener grass on the other side of the fence.

Yes, they have cows in Framingham, what, you think it's just malls and traffic jams?

Meanwhile, over in Southborough, the seemingly contented cows of Breakneck Hill quietly plot their escape.


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