| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1981-01-01 | Court ruling | The Supreme Court ruled in Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord. | N/A | View |
This document is page 11 of a legal filing (Case 20-3061) dated September 16, 2020. It presents legal arguments regarding the 'collateral-order doctrine' and protective orders in criminal cases, arguing that such orders are generally not subject to interlocutory appeal. The text cites various precedents (Firestone, Caparros, Pappas) to support the argument that restricting the dissemination of discovery materials does not violate First Amendment rights and that challenges to such orders should await final judgment.
This legal document, page 12 of a filing from September 16, 2020, argues that protective orders regulating the use of documents in a criminal case are not subject to interlocutory appeal. It cites numerous court precedents, including from the Supreme Court, to establish that such orders are not immediately appealable under the collateral-order doctrine and do not constitute an impermissible prior restraint under the First Amendment. The document asserts that any challenge to a litigant's right to release documents can wait until a final judgment is rendered.
Page 17 of a legal filing (Case 20-3061, dated Oct 2, 2020) produced by the DOJ. The text contains legal arguments citing various precedents (Punn, Mohawk Indus., Hitchcock) to argue that appellate review should generally wait until a final judgment is entered, rather than allowing immediate interlocutory appeals, particularly regarding pre-trial discovery or evidence rulings.
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