Hard Pass

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Hardpass.lol is an invite-only Lemmy Instance.
founded 1 year ago
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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by kewwwi@lemmy.world to c/lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world
 
 
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Trump rages in response, saying he now has ‘no interest’ in renovations and will instead work with Congress to oversee ‘failing institution’

A federal judge has blocked Donald Trump from renaming the Kennedy Center the “Trump-Kennedy Center,” nor can the president close it down for repairs.

District Judge Christopher Cooper in Washington, D.C. won’t let the president name the iconic performing arts center after himself, noting that Congress made it “crystal clear” that the building is to be named after former President John F. Kennedy, “and it cannot bear any other formal name or public memorial” based on a “unilateral say-so” from a Trump-appointed board.

“Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it,” Cooper wrote in Friday’s injunction.

Hours later, the president wrote a lengthy screed against the decision and the judge on his Truth Social account, saying it would be “impossible” to keep the institution open while construction is ongoing, and that he now has “no interest” in renovations and will instead be “working with Congress to transfer this failing Institution back to them so they can make a determination as to what to do with it.”

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fake fan fox (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
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Based (lemmy.ml)
submitted 1 month ago by jankforlife@lemmy.ml to c/memes@lemmy.ml
 
 
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Two podcasters waged a campaign of harassment against Athana Mentzelopoulos, the former CEO of Alberta’s health authority, in an attempt to deter her from pursuing a high-profile lawsuit against the government of Premier Danielle Smith, a judge has concluded.

Justice Michael Lema of the Alberta King’s Bench ordered the two podcasters, David Wallace and James Di Fiore, to stop making abusive comments about Ms. Mentzelopoulos, to remove online videos targeting her and cited them for criminal contempt of court.

That citation means they will have to defend themselves against the accusation that they flouted the authority of the judicial system.

The judgment, released Friday, is the latest twist in a court file fuelling the health care procurement controversy that has roiled the Alberta government for more than a year. What began as a job termination lawsuit has ramified into parallel legal tracks litigating allegations that parties in the case were harassed and intimidated.

Ms. Mentzelopoulos is the former chief executive of Alberta Health Services. She alleges in her ongoing wrongful dismissal suit that the government terminated her employment after she wouldn’t shut down an internal probe looking into the way the health authority awarded contracts to certain private suppliers.

After she launched her litigation last year, online podcasters started maligning her and made false allegations and veiled threats, in a series of online videos for about six months.

The podcasts also disparaged other people connected with the procurement controversy, including former AHS board member Sandy Edmonstone, and Globe and Mail reporters who investigated the issue.

In its statement of defence, the province has said that there were no improprieties in the procurement process, and that Ms. Mentzelopoulos was fired for failing to implement the government’s agenda.

Ms. Mentzelopoulos’s lawyer, Brett Code, has alleged in court hearings and in legal filings that the Alberta government leaked confidential details to podcasters

“We say it’s not a coincidence that this intimidation comes at the same time as the government and AHS are trying to suppress evidence against Ms. Mentzelopoulos. We want to know who funded these people and who gave them information,” he said during a court hearing Monday.

A lawyer for the Alberta government denied the allegations. “The innuendo and assertions made are false. There is no attempt by the Province to suppress anything,” Munaf Mohamed, a counsel for the government, said in a letter to Justice Lema that was filed into the court record Thursday.

The podcasters started targeting Ms. Mentzelopoulos in May, 2025. Mr. Edmonstone then came under attack after she disclosed in June of that year that she intended to call him as a witness in her lawsuit.

Last November, Mr. Edmonstone obtained from Justice Lema an extraordinary remedy known as an Anton Piller order, authorizing court-appointed solicitors to seize and copy the content of the podcasters’ phones and computers.

The content of those files remain in the custody of the independent solicitors while lawyers debate what can be accessed by Mr. Edmonstone.

Ms. Mentzelopoulos also sought access to those electronic records, in addition to her request for a restraining order against the podcasters and the contempt citation.

“It may or may even be likely” that the content of the podcasters’ files hold information about who backed the campaign against Ms. Mentzelopoulos, the judge acknowledged in his ruling Friday.

In his ruling, Justice Lema was highly critical of Mr. Wallace and Mr. Di Fiore’s behaviour, calling it “baseless humiliation and demonization of a litigant in this Court for no apparent purpose other than sapping her will to continue with her case.”

The judge added that “from the cruelty of many of their comments, it appears they may be shameless and that that is a badge of pride for them.”

The judge rejected the argument by the two mens’ lawyer, Craig Alcock, that their podcasts were “hyperbolic or outrageous” but remained legitimate expressions of opinions.

Justice Lema said the content of the podcasts wasn’t journalism or commentary on matters of public interest. “Wallace and Di Fiore are master insulters, insinuators, and muckrakers” the judge wrote.

In his application, Ms. Mentzelopoulos’s lawyer said that finding the podcasters in contempt of court and accessing their records was necessary because they didn’t just defame his client, but conducted a sustained effort to intimidate parties in a court litigation.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/alberta/article-podcasters-harassed-alberta-health-services-ceo-athana-mentzelopoulos/

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Hey folks! I know a while back there was a kerfuffle because syncthing-fork for Android went dark, and then a new person showed up and claimed everything was cool and they'd been privately given the keys or something, and people were concerned. I pinned my fdroid version to the at-that-time-current release until we got clarity.

Well, it's been a while and I just noticed I'm still on that old release. So... how'd it turn out? Do we like the new person yet? Is there a promising fork y'all are using? Or is the project dead? I'm sure I could just go look at the repo, but I'm also sure the repo would tell me "yeah, we're all cool" no matter what, so I'm curious what the community feelings are. Have there even been any useful new releases since then?

Thanks!

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Investigation to establish whether ‘anti-weaponization’ fund is ‘product of collusion and itself a fraud’

A federal judge has reopened Donald Trump’s $10bn case against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), after receiving a third-party motion asserting that the settlement, which lacks detail, “is a product of collusion and is itself a fraud on the court”.

The ruling, issued by the Miami judge Kathleen Williams, revives a lawsuit brought by the president and his sons against the IRS after their personal and business tax returns were leaked by a former contractor.

Trump dropped the lawsuit last week and Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general who was formerly Trump’s personal defense lawyer, announced that, in exchange, the US was “forever barred” from auditing the tax returns of Trump family members. The justice department also unveiled a controversial $1.8bn fund to compensate people who claim they are victims of the federal government.

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