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- Title
NARROWLY RESTRICTING "CLEARLY ESTABLISHED" CIVIL LIBERTIES: THE CONSTITUTIONAL RAMIFICATIONS OF A FAMILY MEMBER'S [UNDER]PROTECTED FEDERAL PRIVACY RIGHTS IN THE DISSEMINATION OF POSTMORTEM IMAGES IN MARSH V. COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO.
- Authors
SIDDIQUI, MAHIRA
- Abstract
The article discusses narrow restrictions on established civil liberties in America as of April 2014, focusing on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit's ruling in the 2012 case Marsh v. County of San Diego which deals with a federally protected right to privacy in the U.S. in regards to the public dissemination of a family member's postmortem death images. Autopsy photographs of children, qualified immunity for a former prosecutor, and American constitutional law are examined.
- Subjects
SAN Diego County (Calif.); UNITED States; POSTMORTEM photography; RIGHT of privacy lawsuits; CIVIL rights; QUALIFIED immunity of public officers; CONSTITUTIONAL law; DISCLOSURE; UNITED States. Court of Appeals (9th Circuit); ACTIONS &; defenses (Law)
- Publication
Golden Gate University Law Review, 2014, Vol 44, Issue 1, p81
- ISSN
0363-0307
- Publication type
Article