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Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - 10:30am

Judicial Watch Scores New Victory for 76-Year-Old Veteran Criminally Prosecuted for Allegedly Taking Photos of American Flags at Veterans Affairs Facility

U.S. District Court Affirms Dismissal of Charges – Rejects Appeal to Reinstate Charges Against Veterans’ Rights Activist Robert L. Rosebrock

(Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch today announced that the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California has affirmed a U.S. Magistrate Judge’s April 11, 2017, dismissal of criminal charges against Judicial Watch client Robert L. Rosebrock, who was prosecuted for allegedly taking “unauthorized” photographs of American Flags at an entrance to a park on the Los Angeles VA campus (United States of America v. Robert L. Rosebrock (No. 2:17-cr-00262)).

The magistrate judge ruled in Rosebrock’s favor on First Amendment grounds. The District Court affirmed the magistrate judge’s dismissal of the charges, but held that the plain language of the regulation under which Rosebrock was prosecuted did not prohibit unauthorized “news” photography anywhere on VA property.

The charges stemmed from allegations that Rosebrock took unauthorized photographs of American Flags and unauthorized videos of VA police on Memorial Day 2016 and Sunday, June 12, 2016. In rejecting the VA photography/video charges, U.S. Magistrate Judge Steve Kim ruled that the regulation as applied to the West LA VA’s Los Angeles National Veterans Park was not reasonable under even the most lenient First Amendment standard. Rosebrock also was acquitted after trial on April 18, 2017, of a further criminal charge for allegedly displaying a napkin-sized American Flag on a fence at the park’s entrance on Memorial Day 2016.

The VA refused to accept the magistrate’s ruling and appealed to the District Court. Among the arguments Judicial Watch lawyers made in defense of the charges was that VA officials sought to retaliate against Rosebrock for his long-standing criticism of the VA for what he considers to be violations of the terms governing use of the land on which the West LA VA facility is located. Since 2008, Rosebrock and a small group of supporters have assembled nearly every Sunday and Memorial Day at the Great Lawn Gate entrance to the Los Angeles National Veterans Park to protest the VA’s failure to make full use of the property to benefit veterans, particularly homeless veterans. For years, the VA has allowed land on the campus to be used for a variety of non-veteran related purposes, including a baseball stadium for the University of California Los Angeles baseball team, athletic fields for a private prep school, and a City of Los Angeles dog park.

Although the District Court did not address VA officials’ motives in pursuing criminal charges against Rosebrock, its ruling lends credence to the claim that Rosebrock was selectively and vindictively prosecuted for his weekly protests. Further evidence of a retaliatory motive is the recent revelation of fraud high up at the Greater Los Angeles VA facility.

“The VA persecuted Rosebrock for his advocacy. The outrageous criminal charges against him have since been shown to lack any factual or legal basis,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “President Trump should ask who at the VA and DOJ are responsible for this reprehensible effort to jail our client for exercising his First Amendment rights.” Separately, Judicial Watch used the Freedom of Information Act to uncover documents showing that then-VA Secretary David J. Shulkin questioned the Rosebrock prosecution, but was misled about the issue by his staff.

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George Soros and the ‘Caravan’

Source: The Wall Street Journal

 

Left-wing nongovernmental organizations are circling the wagons around a rogue U.N. commission accused of vile human-rights abuses . Many NGOs and media operations working in Guatemala are funded by George Soros’s Open Society Foundations and fellow travelers.

 

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A new study published by researchers affiliated with the International Computer Science Institute found that thousands of free apps available in the Google Play store are potentially violating a major federal data-privacy law intended to protect children from online tracking.

The researchers found:

  • 5% of the apps included in the study collected users' location or contact data without first obtaining parental consent.
  • 1,100 of the apps (19% of those studied) shared sensitive information with third-party services.
  • 2,281 apps (39%) appeared to violate Google's terms of service regarding the sharing of persistent identifiers.
  • 40% of the apps in the study shared users' personal information via the internet without applying reasonable security measures.