From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
Occupy Obama lawsuit clears federal hearing
A federal lawsuit by Occupy Wall Street protesters against NYPD officials will proceed to trial. Motions for summary judgement by former NYC police commissioner Ray Kelly et al were denied after a hearing last week by Judge Thomas Griesa of New York's Southern District.
On the night of November 30, 2011 protesters were arbitrarily penned up and then arrested on false charged by officers who claimed they were protecting the POTUS.
"In fact, defendants freely admit that police officers knew of no specific threats to the president that night, and the officers did not observe protesters threatening any violence or criminal activity in the press pen," said Judge Griesa during a hearing last week. A jury trial is demanded: we are waiting for the court schedule to be set.
The attached complaint from April 30, 2012 tells the story.
INDYRADIO bring the ruckus to Twitter: @iRadioTube
"In fact, defendants freely admit that police officers knew of no specific threats to the president that night, and the officers did not observe protesters threatening any violence or criminal activity in the press pen," said Judge Griesa during a hearing last week. A jury trial is demanded: we are waiting for the court schedule to be set.
The attached complaint from April 30, 2012 tells the story.
INDYRADIO bring the ruckus to Twitter: @iRadioTube
For more information:
https://indyradio.info
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network

It is lucky that I have small servers in many locations, I was able to check my coverage, and the site could not be made visible in some areas. I could tell there were DNSSEC fields active, but I was locked out of them.
I told namecheap to fuck off, because I am not the only one who finally learned the intrigues begin there, at namecheap.
When I transferred the domain, I asked the tech at the new registrar if he could delete all DNSSEC fields, I will just say the tech was amazed at what he found. It was set up so I could see my site, from the addresses I usually use, though most of the world was blocked.
Your domain registrar is a possible vector of attack against you
You can not afford wankers like namecheap, where DNSSEC is a bug not a feature.
There are so many things wrong at Namecheap, you really need to distance their filthy site from all aspects of your personal life. It is a security risk in every way.