COURTHOUSES, July 3 â The battle for court
openness is not only to unseal wrongfully withheld
filings, as Inner City Press is doing from SDNY to
Maryland, Massachusetts to Colorado (see below) - it also
now gets physical, like in the United Nations.
In New Orleans, NOLA dot com's
reporter says "I was told Iâd face contempt of court
charges and threatened with cuffs if I didnât leave the
courthouse hallway. When I left the building and
came back, security wouldnât let me back in. When I
questioned on what grounds, I was again threatened with
handcuffs." (James Finn on X).
(In the UN, while covering a billion dollar
budget meeting, Inner City Press was physically removed
out to First Avenue, and has not been allowed back in
since, also banned from online hearings of UN fake court
system, no action by the US Mission to the UN under Mike
Waltz).
A search of Google News, with its
own censorship issues, finds nothing on these NOLA
developments. So Inner City Press publishes this story.
Look it up.
In a hearing held via video conference
before Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter in the United
States District Court for the District of Colorado, Inner
City Press won a significant unsealing ruling in Jones v.
United Airlines, Inc., No. 1:24-cv-03013-NYW-NRN â a race
discrimination case arising from a noose found in a
breakroom at Denver International Airport.
Antonio Jones, an African-American man,
began working as a Ramp Service Employee at DIA in
February 2019. Within four months, he was promoted to Ramp
Service Lead. Less than two percent of the company's ramp
leads at the time were Black. Around December 2020, Jones
entered a breakroom commonly used by Black employees.
There was commotion. A noose had been found on a table.
A suspicious disciplinary write-up later
appeared in Jones's file â not on United letterhead. Jones
was suspended July 5, 2022, and terminated January 27,
2023. His internal appeal was denied April 19, 2023. His
complaint was filed October 28, 2024. As summary judgment
briefing concluded, United Airlines moved to seal 29 of
its exhibits, claiming they contained proprietary
information and private non-party details. Plaintiff's
counsel filed their own late restriction motion covering
additional exhibits. Both parties agreed.
Inner City Press filed oppositions at ECF
Nos. 73 and 76, and Magistrate Judge Neureiter set a
hearing for June 24, 2026. Here is our account of it:
Judge Neureiter began by taking appearances
â United Airlines by phone, plaintiff's counsel and Inner
City Press by Cisco video â and then said he had looked at
some of the sealed exhibits and didn't think they merited
restriction. Plaintiff's counsel quickly agreed, except
for the names and races of comparators.
Inner City Press said: fine, redact the
names, but leave in the race â that is what this case is
about. Judge Neureiter agreed. United Airlines' lawyer
asked for time to review the exhibits they had sealed,
then said they contained proprietary information.
Judge Neureiter disagreed, saying the
investigation of the noose is not proprietary, nor whether
they had a video camera at the gate or not. Ultimately he
told United Airlines to re-docket the exhibits â 29 in all
â by July 17. Inner City Press did not object on timing,
given defense counsel's travel schedule.
"You're not going to press before then,"
Judge Neureiter remarked.
But we are going to press â here, on
the unsealing momentum. Watch this site.