The Herald News: Marine biologist Nancy Black fined $12,500 for violating Marine Mammal Protection Act

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Cause of Action Executive Director Dan Epstein said Black is the first person to be criminally charged for violating the marina mammal act. Others who committed more egregious actions in the past have received minimal administrative fines.

 

“Ms. Black’s case illustrates how the power of the federal bureaucracy can affect the lives of hard-working Americans,” he said, calling it a cautionary tale. “When power is unchecked, it becomes unbridled and so individuals and small businesses often end up as victims of its abuse.”

ZwillGen blog: FTC COMMISSIONERS’ STATEMENTS BECOME FACTORS IN WYNDHAM AND LABMD

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The second incident relates to the FTC’s complaint against LabMD, Inc., a medical testing company whose security practices the FTC alleged were unfair and deceptive.  LabMD refused to settle this action with the FTC, and the complaint proceeded to litigation before an FTC Administrative Law Judge whose findings eventually will be reviewed by the FTC Commissioners.

 

On Dec. 17, LabMD moved to disqualify Commissioner Julie Brill from reviewing the ALJ’s decision, arguing that Commissioner Brill referenced LabMD in two speeches, suggesting that she had prejudged this case.  The FTC responded, explaining that, although a citation to the LabMD administrative complaint appears as a single footnote in the written versions of the speeches, it does not provide any commentary on this case or suggest it had been decided.  Rather, the FTC explained, the reference is listed as one of several other complaints where the FTC “found reason to believe” that a company failed to use reasonable and appropriate security measures.  Despite disagreeing with LabMD’s motion, Commissioner Brill chose to recuse herself from review of the LabMD proceedings to prevent this ancillary issue from becoming a distraction.

VIDEO: Dan Epstein Talks Transparency on NBC Washington

Reed Rubinstein on The Janine Turner Show 1/7/2014

Reed Rubinstein on The Janine Turner Show about how the Department of Labor discourages entrepreneurship and threatens small businesses.

VIDEO: Rhea Lana Riner Appears on Fox Business

How the Department of Labor’s erroneous action discourages entrepreneurship and threatens small businesses. Rhea Lana’s president Rhea Lana Riner explains how the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act has her in a dispute with the Department of Labor.

Watch Rhea Lana on FOX Business

Bloomberg BusinessWeek: A Franchisor Sues the U.S. Labor Department Over Volunteer Workers

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The DOL’s actions could cripple Riner’s business and the “entire consignment industry,” the lawsuit alleges. It was filed in federal court for the District of Columbia by Cause of Action, a legal group founded in 2011 to support limited government. It challenges the Labor Department’s policy of banning for-profit enterprises from using volunteer labor,  and it asks the court to block the DOL from further investigating or collecting penalties from Rhea Lana’s. It also asks for attorney’s fees but does not request a specific monetary award.

 

As I wrote last summer, the U.S. Labor Department opened an investigation into Rhea Lana’s volunteer policy in January 2013, after the Arkansas Department of Labor took a similar action. In August 2013, the feds informed the company that it was in violation of minimum wage laws for not fairly compensating its volunteers—mostly stay-at-home mothers and retired grandmothers who help staff Rhea Lana’s mammoth consignment sales in Riner’s hometown of Conway, Ark., and around the country through her franchisees. In exchange for their work, volunteers are given an opportunity to shop early at the sales, snagging the best used toys, clothes, and baby gear for themselves.

Washington Post: Federal regulators suing Buckyballs founder in rare product-recall case

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After Zucker shut down his company, the commission responded by naming him in its lawsuit. The commission supported that move with a legal precedent known as the Park doctrine, which allows the government to criminally prosecute corporate officers for failing to prevent violations of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.

 

Critics say it is a misuse of the doctrine. “At a minimum, this action is an obvious overreach of the CPSC’s authority,” said Dan Epstein, executive director of Cause of Action, a conservative legal group backing Zucker. “At a maximum, it is an illegal abuse of power by persons within the commission who seek to punish Mr. Zucker.”