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Dan Ackman |
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Bio Resume Clips On Law Taxi Stories OPERATION REFUSAL LITIGATION PRESS SCHALLER' S TAXI FACT BOOK WALL STREET JOURNAL ON THE TLC NEW YORK PRESS ON THE YELLOW PERIL SOMETHING FROM SAM SLOAN Home
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TLC ACCESS LITIGATION ACKMAN v. GIULIANI, et al The Decision: Ackman v. Giuliani,
Index No. 101652/00.
FROM
THE DECISION: The History: In his decision, Justice Parness said, "It does not appear that any other member of the public has sought hearing access." This odd statement had no basis in the record and no basis in fact. Since the case was decided, I have learned that reporters from the Times, The Daily News, and Newsday had all sought access to TLC tribunals, and had all been turned away. In fact, in 1998, NYCLU Executive Director Norman Siegel wrote to TLC Chair Diane McGrath-McKechie protesting TLC practices: "To deny the public this right is to mire the TLC in secret, closed door proceedings that, at a minimum, will breed distrust and mistrust. Moreover, it may be illegal," Siegel wrote. It was, but neither the NYCLU nor the mainstream press did a thing about it. MORE Press Coverage: The New York Times,
March 11, 2000: Daniel L. Ackman had figured that his request was so straightforward that it would be hassle-free. He figured wrong. MORE Columbia Journalism Review, May/June 2000 Bumping into the unyielding doors of the Guiliani administration has become such a routine experience for the New York City press that when a newcomer managed recently to pry one of those doors open it was man-bites-dog news. MORE Press Release,
March 10, 2000 Aftermath: Proposed Order Submitted by Dan Ackman
Proposed
Order Submitted by the Mayor and the TLC
Letter
from Dan Ackman to Justice Parness
Letter from Dan Ackman to Justice Parness TLC Courts Open— But Just a Crack Newsday, April 4,
2000 The Daily News,
April 4, 2000
Final Judgment
and Order
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