"IT’S COWARDLY" VAGOS MC SAYS REGARDING HELLS ANGELS MC

2 years ago
39

#HELLSANGELS #HELLSANGELSMC #VAGOSMC
This was not Noyes’ first brush with operating a vehicle under the influence.“He was required to have an alcohol interlock device and he was operating a vehicle not equipped with an interlock device,” Canfield said.The motorcyclists' name has not yet been released, pending notification of next of kin. Canfield did share that both bikers appeared to be from Massachusetts, likely traveling for Motorcycle Week.
00:00 I NEED YOUR HELP
03:42 Laconia bike week
09:55 New Video out of Vegas VAGOS and HELLS ANGELS
11:19 “IT’S COWARDLY” VAGOS MC TESTIFIES ABOUT HELLS ANGELS ACTIONS IN VEGAS
15:14 Update Hells Angels Arizona

🔥Trademark law does not let a trademark owner exert its trademark rights to stop news reporting about it or its products or services. You see proof of this everyday on the front pages of newspapers, the homepages of news websites, and countless blogs. Mainstream reporters and non-traditional journalists routinely report on earnings announcements, job lay-offs, and accounting scandals without worrying that they are infringing or diluting the trademarks of the companies and organizations they report on. There are several legal bases for this result: there is no risk of confusion between the news source and the trademark owner; nominative fair use protects this use of the trademark owner's mark; and the federal dilution statute expressly exempts "news reporting and news commentary" from a dilution claim. See 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(3)(B). As noted above, one court has held that a blogger's critical commentary on a company qualified as "news reporting and news commentary." See BidZirk, LLC v. Smith, 2007 WL 3119445 (D.S.C. Oct. 22, 2007).
Trademark law does not permit a trademark owner to use its trademark rights to silence commentary and criticism. As with news reporting, courts recognize the important First Amendment values at stake and usually deny efforts by trademark owners to encroach on legitimate commentary and criticism. There are several legal bases for this result: there is no risk of confusion between the commentator and the trademark owner, and nominative fair use may protect this use of the trademark owner's mark. Additionally, courts are likely to find that your use of a trademark in commentary or criticism is "not in connection with a good or service" and "noncommercial" (the argument is especially strong for the latter category). But note that some courts may find your use of a trademark for criticism and commentary to be commercial if you host advertising or link to commercial websites. In any event, to defeat a trademark dilution claim, you do not even need to show that your use is noncommercial. The federal dilution statute creates a categorical exemption for "criticizing . . . or commenting upon the famous mark owner or the goods or services of the famous mark owner." 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(3)(A)(ii). 🔥

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