[EL] Check out F.D.A. Surveillance of Scientists Spread to Outside Critic...

JBoppjr at aol.com JBoppjr at aol.com
Mon Jul 16 07:31:29 PDT 2012


First, as to your questions, there were only a few  persons publicly 
identified with R-71 and we documented that all were  harassed.  Second, regarding 
harassment of R-71 petition signers, their  identity was kept secret by our 
preliminary injunctions so, of course, none were  harassed, because none 
were disclosed.  Third, they were  publicly identified years later, when all 
of the heat went out of the issue  and no campaign of harassment was actually 
launched against them by those  that threatened ti.
 
    But the most important fact was that the  announcement of the threat to 
map quest the petition signers was made early in  the period of collecting 
the signatures, way before they would be submitted to  the Sec of State.  
The reason for the announcement was to intimidate people  from even signing 
the petitions in the first place -- by threatening a repeat of  the Prop 8 
harassment campaign, now directed at signers of the R-71  petitions. So the 
whole point was not to actually harass them but to  threaten to do it to 
discourage them from signing -- which worked to a certain  degree.  
 
    Finally regarding police response to the  harassment, first, much of it 
is not criminal and cognizable harassment does not  have to be criminal, 
and second, the police did absolutely nothing about the  incidents of 
harassment other than take a report.  Harassors do not leave  their business cards 
and thus there is really nothing the police can do.   Jim Bopp
 
 
In a message dated 7/16/2012 10:16:02 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
dasmith at ufl.edu writes:

Hi Jim

Again, where and when exactly did the  harassment occur during the 
Washington state R-71 popular referendum signature  gathering that led to Doe v. 
Reed?

As the lead author of the Direct  Democracy Scholars amicus brief, that you 
may recall was mentioned twice  during SCOTUS oral argument, I was unable 
much evidence at all of an  individual being harassed for signing a petition 
due to the subsequent public  disclosure of petitions.  And if there ever 
was a case of such  harassment, there are--of course--criminal statutes that 
would  apply.

If I'm not mistaken, on remand, the Federal District Court 
[_http://electionlawblog.org/wp-content/uploads/doevreed-summary-judgment.pdf_ 
(http://electionlawblog.org/wp-content/uploads/doevreed-summary-judgment.pdf) ]  in its 
summary judgment dismissing your as-applied challenge had this to say  about 
the harassment due to public record requests of those signing R-71:

Applied here, the Court finds that Doe has only supplied  evidence that 
hurts rather than helps its case. Doe has supplied minimal  testimony from a 
few witnesses who, in their respective deposition  testimony, stated either 
that police efforts to mitigate reported incidents  was sufficient or 
unnecessary. Doe has supplied no evidence that police were  or are now unable or 
unwilling to mitigate any claimed harassment or are now  unable or unwilling to 
control the same, should disclosure be made. This is  a quite different situ
ation than the progeny of cases providing an  as-applied exemption wherein 
the government was actually involved in  carrying out the harassment, which 
was historic, pervasive, and documented.  To that end, the evidence supplied 
by Doe purporting to be the best set of  experiences of threats, 
harassment, or reprisals suffered or reasonably  likely to be suffered by R-71 signers 
cannot be characterized as “serious  and widespread.”

My Doe v. Reed amicus is available _here_ 
(http://wei.secstate.wa.gov/osos/en/initiativesReferenda/Documents/Court-Federal_Court/27_Amicus_Briefs/Direct
%20Democracy%20Scholars.pdf) ,  and and my recent comments, more broadly on 
disclosure, are _here_ 
(http://electionsmith.wordpress.com/category/doe-v-reed/) . And I  know you're familiar with my _ELJ  article_ 
(http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/dasmith/Garrett&Smith.pdf)  with Beth Garrett: 

So, please correct the record for me  about the incidents of untoward 
harassment that individuals signing a petition  have incurred as a result of 
public disclosure laws.  

Best,

Dan

daniel a. smith, ph.d.

professor & uf research foundation professor (2010-2012)

coordinator, political science internship program

department of political science

003 anderson hall              |  phone: 352-273-2346

po box 117325                  |  fax: 352-392-8127

university of florida          |  email: _dasmith at ufl.edu_ 
(mailto:dasmith at ufl.edu) 

gainesville, fl 32611-7325     |  _www.clas.ufl.edu/users/dasmith/_ 
(http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/dasmith/) 

_http://twitter.com/#!/electionsmith_ (http://twitter.com/#!/electionsmith) 
On  7/16/2012 9:34 AM, _JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com)   wrote:


Of course not, this involved scientific critics of the FDA.   The point is 
that government officials will go after critics however they  find out about 
them and using the methods they have available.
 
Regarding campaign contribution, in Doe v. Reed and the Prop 8 case, we  
document over 250 incidents of harassment of supporters of Prop 8, many of  
which were only contributors who were map quested on the Internet. A  campaign 
of harassment that occurred against them is unusual.  Public  officials 
that retaliate against critics are usually very careful to make  sure that no 
one knows they are doing it.  The FDA did not send out a  press release on 
their actions against their scientific critics  either.  Jim Bopp
 
 
In a message dated 7/15/2012 11:03:48 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_rhasen at law.uci.edu_ (mailto:rhasen at law.uci.edu)  writes:

I  didn't see any evidence in this article that anyone was being harassed 
for  making campaign contributions, and as we've discussed on this list ad  
nauseum (and as spelled out in more detail _here_ 
(http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1948313) ), my view of the evidence from two recent 
 cases involving allegations of harassment of campaign contributors is that 
 there is no systemic evidence that harassment of campaign contributors is  
a problem.  Rare instances of genuine threats of harassment may be  dealt 
with through an "as applied" exemption to disclosure  laws.



On 7/15/12 8:06 AM, Joe La Rue wrote:


It is interesting that Van Hollen is upset about THIS disclosure.  Of 
course, he was number 14 on the list. I guess disclosure is only good  when it's 
somebody else's speech that is being disclosed.

On Jul  15, 2012, at 6:28 AM, _JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com)   
wrote:



 
_Click here: F.D.A. Surveillance of Scientists  Spread to Outside Critics - 
NYTimes.com_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/15/us/fda-surveillance-of-scientists-spread-to-outside-critics.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all)  
 
Government going after critics, exactly the type of activity that  can 
chill political speech and that makes disclosure a burden.   Jim Bopp



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