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Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

1019 Congress
Houston, Texas 77002
7137555183

Harris County Law Library

Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

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Ex Libris Juris - HCLL Blog

Celebrating Law Day 2023

May 1, 2023 Jeanine Vasquez

Law Day, a national day set aside to celebrate the legal system, its contribution to American governance, and the rights and freedoms it has engendered, has been celebrated annually since 1961 when Congress passed a joint resolution designating May 1 as Law Day, U.S.A. To help cultivate an appreciation and understanding of the law and all that it encompasses, organizers at the American Bar Association have developed themes with activities and programs centered around that theme.

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Tags Law Day, First Amendment

To Busk or Nor to Busk – Free Speech and the Street Performer

May 20, 2021 Lori-Ann Craig

In January 2020, Anthony (Tony) Barilla, a professional musician and accordionist, filed a lawsuit against the City of Houston in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, alleging that the City’s busking ordinance is a violation of the Free Speech Clause in the First Amendment.

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In Laws & Regulations Tags Busking, Street Performers, First Amendment

Part 2: Mardi Gras Day

February 13, 2018 Guest User

Rex, one of the oldest Mardi Gras krewes, rolls its iconic Boeuf Gras float down Canal Street on a recent Fat Tuesday.

Part 2 of 2. In honor of Mardi Gras, this blog post replaces our regularly scheduled Tech Tuesday installment.

Flambeaux provide traditional-style lighting for Carnival Parades.

The New Orleans Code of Ordinances, Chapter 34, is simply titled “Carnival, Mardi Gras.” It begins with a list of defined terms familiar to New Orleanians, such as “Flambeaux” and “Tandem Float,” and distinguishes between a “Truck Parade” and a “Float Parade.” Most of the code lays out basic guidelines for safety and spectacle, including rules for parade permitting, float safety, the minimum number of marching bands per parade (7), and so on. However, controversy has erupted this year over Carnival Code Article V, which bans Mardi Gras participants from distributing any “doubloon, trinket or other throw which . . . displays, conveys or communicates any . . . political . . . message.”

"Quick come see, there goes Robert E. Lee"

New Orleans has so many parades, the city has posted permanent signs.

To understand why this is suddenly causing such a stir, know that roughly nine months ago, the city of New Orleans removed high profile Confederate and Reconstruction era monuments from public display. The most famous of these was an iconic statue of General Robert E. Lee, which stood since 1884 atop a massive column in the center of Lee Circle, a key part of the route most Mardi Gras parades must follow. This Carnival season, local vendors have reported selling at least 6,000 strands of beads displaying the words “Forever Lee Circle” with a depiction of the statue. Some New Orleanians believe that Article V’s restriction on political throws is an impermissible suppression of free political speech on public streets, as guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The city appears prepared to argue that Article V meets the high bar of being a valid time, place, and manner restriction under established jurisprudence, which has hinted in the past that blanket, content-neutral suppression of political speech on public streets might be permissible under certain circumstances (See Carey v. Brown, 447 U.S. 455, 100 S.Ct. 2286, 65 L.Ed.2d 263 (1980)). If this issue were to be heard in court, it might prove a fascinating extension of existing First Amendment case law, and potentially a star turn for Mardi Gras in the hallowed halls of the Supreme Court.

Krewe of Bacchus rolls down Saint Charles Avenue the Sunday night before Mardi Gras.

Intricate, hand beading is a hallmark of Mardi Gras Indian suits.

A Mardi Gras Indian displays the fruits of his labor.

Federal Law has also come to impact the lives and work of the Mardi Gras Indians. An indispensable part of New Orleans folk life, the roots of the Mardi Gras Indians stem all the way back to the 1700s. The first formal “tribe,” the Creole Wild West, was founded in 1885. Today, Mardi Gras Indians are best known for their elaborate, intricately handcrafted suits. These suits cost thousands of dollars to construct, and are typically worn only a few times after twelve months of design and effort before work begins on the next year’s ensemble. As the new millennium dawned, Mardi Gras Indians were increasingly frustrated that as they spent their personal money, time, and talent to fuel and continually develop this staple tradition, unaffiliated photographers were making money snapping pics and selling prints of the suits. Hoping to protect their intellectual property from this type of unauthorized derivative work, Mardi Gras Indians have started registering their suits as works of sculpture with the United States Copyright Office. It is unclear whether a court would honor these copyrights because of limitations in American jurisprudence for the protection of intellectual property in fashion, yet these registrations and a campaign of public awareness have discouraged photographers from profiting off the work of Mardi Gras Indians without first obtaining permission and sometimes a licensing agreement. New Orleans, land of dreams, where John Locke’s Sweat of the Brow doctrine meets “Iko Iko.”

Further reading...

  • Watch live Mardi Gras coverage all day on WDSU
  • House of Dance & Feathers for great information and photos
  • The ELLA Project pairs New Orleans culture creators with intellectual property and entertainment attorneys.
  • A relatively fresh look at John Locke’s Sweat of the Brow doctrine in American legal history.
Tags First Amendment, Freedom of Speech, Copyright, Intellectual Property, Mardi Gras
 
Ex Libris Juris - HCLL Blog RSS

What’s behind the name? “Ex Libris Juris” is Latin for “from the books of law” and much of the information here will relate to the legal information collected and curated by the Law Library. Additionally, “Ex Libris” has long appeared on bookplates – labels appearing inside the front cover of books – and has acquired the connoted meaning “from the library of” to show ownership of the book. Using this connotation, the phrase becomes “from the library of law” and better describes the posts about digital resources, event announcements, and research tips that will regularly appear here.

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