White House correspondent Brian Karem has again come up the winner in a legal fight that commenced when the Trump Administration attempted to suspend his press access
Brian Karem has again come up the winner in a legal fight that commenced when the Trump Administration attempted to suspend his press access to White House grounds. On Friday, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court's injunction by finding that the Playboy correspondent was likely to succeed on the claim that his due process rights were violated.
Karem filed suit after White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham notified him of repercussions for breaching standards of decorum at a "Social Media Summit" last July where President Trump convened conservative bloggers and social media celebrities. At the event, Karem got under the skin of Sebastian Gorka, one of Trump's advisors, and the two exchanged words.
The lawsuit claimed a violation of the First Amendment, but what really ended up winning was Karem's argument that the White House had failed to give him fair notice about its rules of professional conduct.
The White House argued that it provided fair notice of rules in the aftermath of a prior legal battle with CNN correspondent Jim Acosta, but the D.C. Circuit doesn't see enough.,' but in that very same letter, the White House expressly declined to adopt 'specific provisions for journalist conduct in the open areas of the White House' 'in the hope that professional journalistic norms' would 'suffice to regulate conduct in those places,'" states the opinion.
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