Byron Allen’s Allen Media Group Wins Significant Legal Victory in Racial Discrimination-Based Lawsuit Against McDonald’s Corporation in U.S. Federal Court

Byron Allen’s Allen Media Group Wins Significant Legal Victory in Racial Discrimination-Based Lawsuit Against McDonald’s Corporation in U.S. Federal Court

Byron Allen’s Allen Media Team (AMG) divisions Entertainment Studios Networks, Inc. (“Entertainment Studios”) and Weather Group, LLC (“Weather Group”) received a significant legal victory in federal court docket on Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.

(Image: Logo Courtesy of Allen Media Group)

(Impression: Symbol Courtesy of Allen Media Group)

The AMG lawsuit in the beginning filed on May perhaps 20, 2021 in opposition to McDonald’s Corporation (“McDonald’s”) seeks $10 billion in damages for racial discrimination. According to the lawsuit, McDonald’s intentionally discriminated against AMG divisions Entertainment Studios and Weather conditions Team by a sample of racial stereotyping and refusals to agreement in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and the California Unruh Civil Legal rights Act, Cal. Civil Code § 51.5. On Friday, Sept. 16, 2022, defendant McDonald’s was denied a Movement to Dismiss by Choose Fernando M. Olguin of the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The situation will now continue to trial prior to a jury in Could 2023.

McDonald’s is the world’s major worldwide foods support retailer with more than 39,000 areas that produce in excess of $100 billion in once-a-year revenue. African Us residents symbolize approximately 40 per cent of McDonald’s U.S. profits, with McDonald’s taking billions of dollars just about every 12 months from African American shoppers. For each the lawsuit, of its about $1.6 billion once-a-year advertising and marketing spending plan, McDonald’s spends significantly less than around $5 million every 12 months on African American-owned media, and it has refused to market on Entertainment Studios networks or The Temperature Channel since Allen acquired the network in 2018. Per the lawsuit, the McDonald’s President and CEO Chris Kempczinski will make about $11 million per yr, which is a lot more than double what McDonald’s spends per calendar year on all of Black-owned media merged.

The lawsuit (case range 2:21-cv-04972-FMO-MAA Enjoyment Studios Networks, Inc. et al v. McDonald’s United states of america, LLC) alleges that McDonald’s refusal to deal is the end result of racial stereotyping through McDonald’s tiered marketing construction that differentiates on the basis of race. The major marketing tier for McDonald’s is referred to as “general market” and it constitutes the large vast majority of McDonald’s advertising funds. McDonald’s, on the other hand, designed a individual “African American” tier with a substantially lesser budget and a lot less-favorable pricing and other terms. McDonald’s contracts with a separate advert agency, Burrell Communications, for this African American tier, thus making independent and unequal tracks for Black-owned media companies to get paid advertising earnings. McDonald’s has made a discriminatory ecosystem that is different but not equal.

In accordance to the lawsuit, McDonald’s relegated Entertainment Studios to the significantly less-favorable African American tier even nevertheless the companies have and work television networks that have typical sector charm and do not precisely target African American audiences. McDonald’s does so mainly because the firms are owned by Allen, an African American. By means of this stereotyping, McDonald’s prevented Leisure Studios and Weather Group from accessing McDonald’s general market advertising spending plan and deprived the businesses of promoting profits that in any other case would have been paid if McDonald’s addressed the companies the same as likewise positioned, white-owned providers.

Several vital details from the courtroom ruling (see attached PDF) that are favorable to the AMG/Amusement Studios/Climate Group position include things like, on site 11 of its viewpoint, the courtroom recognized that racist responses by senior executives—even if not directed to the plaintiff—can evidence racial bias to aid a racial discrimination assert below Section 1981. The lawsuit alleges that senior McDonald’s executives, which includes its latest CEO, designed racially derogatory remarks that proof a lifestyle of racial hostility within just the firm.

“This is about economic inclusion of African American-owned enterprises in the U.S. economic system. McDonald’s takes billions from African American people and presents nearly nothing at all back again.”

“The most important trade deficit in The us is the trade deficit concerning white corporate The united states and Black The united states, and McDonald’s is guilty of perpetuating this disparity. The financial exclusion ought to cease immediately,” claimed Byron Allen, founder/chairman/CEO of Allen Media Team.

“McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski acquired caught sending racist text messages and McDonald’s has been sued by the Black franchisees, the Black executives, the Black personnel, the Black suppliers, and 52 per cent of the McDonald’s stockholders a short while ago voted to hire a 3rd-get together firm to look into McDonald’s for civil legal rights violations. This is historic!!! The overt and systemic racism at McDonald’s is plain and indefensible. McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski, McDonald’s Chief Internet marketing Officer Morgan Flatley, and the Board of Directors must be fired.”

“As alleged in our complaint, McDonald’s has engaged in pernicious racial discrimination in violation of federal and condition law,” claimed counsel for Mr. Allen and his companies, David Schecter and Skip Miller, companions in Miller Barondess, LLP.

“We are self-confident the jury will recognize the injustice that has happened here and will award considerable damages. We are hunting forward to our day in court docket.”

About Allen Media Team

Chairman and CEO Byron Allen established Allen Media Group/Enjoyment Studios in 1993. Headquartered in Los Angeles, it has workplaces in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, and Charleston, S.C. Allen Media Group owns 27 ABC-NBC-CBS-FOX community affiliate broadcast television stations in 21 U.S. markets and twelve 24-hour High definition television networks serving just about 220 million subscribers: THE Weather CHANNEL, THE Weather conditions CHANNEL EN ESPAÑOL, Animals.Television set, COMEDY.Television set, RECIPE.Television, Automobiles.Television, ES.Television set, MYDESTINATION.Tv, JUSTICE CENTRAL.Television, THEGRIO, THIS Tv set, and PATTRN. Allen Media Team also owns the streaming platforms HBCU GO, Sporting activities.Tv, THEGRIO, THE Weather conditions CHANNEL STREAMING App and Regional NOW—the free of charge-streaming AVOD services run by THE Weather conditions CHANNEL and written content partners, which provides genuine-time, hyper-nearby information, weather conditions, targeted visitors, athletics, and life style information. Allen Media Group also creates, distributes, and sells advertising and marketing for 68 television plans, building it 1 of the most significant impartial producers/ distributors of 1st-run syndicated television programming for broadcast television stations. With a library of in excess of 5,000 hrs of owned content material across numerous genres, Allen Media Group offers movie material to broadcast tv stations, cable television networks, cellular devices, and multimedia electronic. Our mission is to give excellent programming to our viewers, on the internet people, and Fortune 500 promotion companions.

Defamation lawsuit targets group behind “2,000 Mules” election denial film : NPR

Defamation lawsuit targets group behind “2,000 Mules” election denial film : NPR

Catherine Engelbrecht, seen here in 2015, founded the controversial nonprofit True the Vote. A new lawsuit alleges that Engelbrecht and True the Vote defamed a small company that makes software for election workers.

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Catherine Engelbrecht, seen here in 2015, founded the controversial nonprofit True the Vote. A new lawsuit alleges that Engelbrecht and True the Vote defamed a small company that makes software for election workers.

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Konnech, a small Michigan company that makes election logistics software, says a “smear campaign” whipped up by the controversial group True the Vote has led to death threats and forced the company’s CEO to leave home in fear for his and his family’s lives. The company believes a driving force behind the threats is xenophobia; Konnech’s CEO immigrated to the U.S. from China in the 1980s and became an American citizen in 1997.

In the past, the executive of a relatively unknown company might have chosen to ignore such claims to try to deprive them of attention.

But in the wake of the conspiracy-fueled Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and in the era of QAnon and Pizzagate — bizarre and baseless theories that have contributed to very real violence — that strategy may no longer be tenable. The experience of the election technology company Dominion Voting Systems, which became the target of widespread conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, also underscored how wild claims could significantly damage a company’s business.

Just a few weeks after accusations against the company first surfaced, Konnech turned to the federal courts and filed a lawsuit. Konnech was “not going to take any chances and felt very strongly that it needed to act and act quickly,” said Jon Goldberg, a company spokesperson.

Konnech, which makes scheduling software for poll workers, joined a growing number of election officials and companies that have used defamation law to try to fight back against election-related conspiracies.

Dominion Voting Systems, as well as another election technology company, Smartmatic, have filed multiple lawsuits against media outlets and prominent Trump-world figures that spread allegedly defamatory claims about them in the 2020 election. Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Wandrea Moss, the latter of whom testified in front of the congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, have also filed lawsuits alleging that they were defamed by election conspiracy theories and subjected to “vitriol, threats, and harassment.” A Pennsylvania postal service employee also took legal action, and alleged that he was falsely accused of manipulating vote-by-mail ballots in the 2020 election. Conspiracy theories about the 2020 election have continued to spread, but there’s some indication that these lawsuits have pushed such claims farther from the mainstream of conservative media and toward the fringes, with some on the self-publishing digital newsletter platform Substack.

Konnech’s lawsuit targets True the Vote, which has made a name for itself with dubious claims of widespread voter fraud, including the film “2,000 Mules,” and has been increasingly linked to QAnon. Konnech claims in its lawsuit that True the Vote and its leaders, Catherine Engelbrecht and Gregg Phillips, have falsely accused Konnech of orchestrating “a red Chinese communist op run against the United States” and improperly accessed Konnech’s data.

“I will state clearly and unequivocally: neither Eugene Yu nor Konnech are in any way associated with the Chinese Communist Party,” said Goldberg.

In an unusual move, a federal judge agreed to issue a temporary restraining order against True the Vote, which requires the group to turn over “all property and data obtained from Konnech’s protected computers,” and blocks True the Vote from “using, disclosing, or exploiting the property and data downloaded from Konnech’s protected computers.”

Additionally, Goldberg, the company’s spokesperson, told NPR that the company “has been and is working closely with law enforcement at multiple levels regarding True the Vote’s claims.”

The company also added an “election misinformation advisory” to its website to try to combat “false and malicious claims” from True the Vote.

True the Vote has denied any wrongdoing. “Everything we have ever said about any of this is true,” said Engelbrecht in a livestream the day the lawsuit was filed. “The allegations made by Konnech are meritless. True the Vote looks forward to a public conversation about Konnech’s attempts to silence examination of its activities through litigation.”

A representative of True the Vote also provided NPR with a letter sent to Konnech’s attorney, which claims that Konnech has made unspecified “inaccuracies and misrepresentations” to the court, and asserts that an unnamed “third party” first obtained Konnech’s data — not True the Vote.

How the threat of legal action affected “2,000 Mules”

Engelbrecht and Phillips previously executive produced and provided the research for the widely debunked election conspiracy theory film, “2,000 Mules.” And there’s some indication that the threat of defamation lawsuits may have slowed the spread of claims from the film.

The right-wing provocateur Dinesh D’Souza, who directed “2,000 Mules,” said that he decided not to include “ballot trafficking” allegations against specific, named organizations in the film due to legal concerns. Fox News has largely avoided covering the “2,000 Mules,” which D’Souza suggested is related to Fox’s fear of litigation.

Last month, the publisher of an upcoming book version of “2,000 Mules” also abruptly recalled copies from bookstores. NPR obtained the recalled version of the book, which, unlike the film, makes allegations against specific nonprofit groups, and accuses them of “organized crime.”

After one of those groups said the book’s contents were completely false and potentially “libelous,” True the Vote distanced itself from the book.

Meanwhile, the group has pivoted away from the “2,000 Mules” and toward Konnech.

True the Vote weaves a spy novelesque story

At an event in August dubbed “The Pit,” Engelbrecht and Phillips unveiled what they called the “Tiger Project,” which focused on Konnech. In interviews with far-right podcasters, Phillips has spun a cloak-and-dagger story that he compared to a James Bond movie, in which he helped uncover a supposed Chinese plot to infiltrate American elections.

In Phillips’ telling, he first heard about the company from “my guys” — unnamed “colleagues and friends” who invited him to their room in the Hilton Anatole hotel in Dallas one late night in January 2021.

“I get there and they’re putting towels, rolled up towels, under the doors and you know, and all my guys are armed,” Phillips said on the podcast “1819 News.”

Phillips said his colleagues showed him personal information for 1.8 million American poll workers, including “name, address, date of birth, Social Security number, banking information,” which supposedly was held on a server in China.

Konnech maintains that this claim is entirely false, and that all of its data on American customers is stored solely in the U.S.

After seeing this presentation, Phillips claims that he and Engelbrecht brought Konnech’s data to the FBI, which he claims then worked with them for more than a year on a supposed “counterintelligence” operation looking into Konnech. At one point, Phillips said he had a “secret squirrels” meeting with the FBI in Milwaukee to share information. Eventually, however, the FBI “completely betrayed us,” Phillips said, and told True the Vote that they were themselves under scrutiny from law enforcement.

True the Vote has not publicly provided evidence to support the claim of a “counterintelligence” operation along those lines, nor has NPR found any corroboration. The FBI did not respond to a request for comment.

True the Vote’s appeal to QAnon

Konnech argues that this wild story is a work of fiction.

“Konnech is extremely confident in the multiple levels of security it employs to protect its customers’ data,” said Goldberg, who noted that Konnech does not even possess information on 1.8 million poll workers. The real number is under 250,000, the company says. But rather than ignore True the Vote’s claims that they saw Konnech’s secure data, Goldberg said, Konnech essentially decided to take True the Vote’s claims at face value. In their lawsuit, Konnech alleges that True the Vote admitted to violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act by accessing the company’s data.

At least so far, the claims against Konnech have not received widespread attention in more established conservative media. This case still demonstrates how allegations can spread through fringe online networks.

Phillips has specifically encouraged followers of the far-right QAnon conspiracy theory — so-called “anons” — to research and post about Konnech.

“These people are the most amazing patriots that I’ve ever come in contact with,” Phillips said of QAnon followers. Phillips also appeared on an online show hosted by QAnon influencers, where he reiterated his praise of the “anons.” The left-leaning media watchdog group Media Matters documented additional ties between True the Vote and QAnon. In a sign of how QAnon has moved closer to the mainstream of the Republican Party, former President Donald Trump has repeatedly posted messages from the group’s followers online, and featured a QAnon-linked song at a rally over the weekend.

A digital newsletter hosted by the online platform Substack has amplified the idea that Konnech represents “Chinese infiltration” of U.S. election systems. A spokesperson for Substack declined NPR’s request for comment.

Former Trump adviser turned podcaster Steve Bannon further promoted that Substack newsletter about Konnech in a post on the social media network Gettr. A spokesperson for Bannon also declined to comment.

The misinformation about Konnech has helped feed online harassment and threats against Konnech’s CEO and his family, Goldberg said.

“Might want to book flights back to Wuhan before we hang you until dead!” reads one email to the CEO cited in the company’s lawsuit.

Another aspect of Konnech’s decision to go to court, Goldberg said, involved the importance of maintaining faith in U.S. elections.

“They are facing a group that, through its own actions and by spreading falsehoods and misinformation, [is] essentially targeting the election process,” said Goldberg.

That sentiment appeared to be echoed in the restraining order handed down in Konnech’s defamation case.

Federal Judge Kenneth Hoyt wrote in his order that the evidence presented by Konnech showed that a restraining order “would in fact benefit the public’s expectation of integrity in the U.S. election process.”

Eid holidays in Bangladesh saw record road accident deaths: Group | News

Eid holidays in Bangladesh saw record road accident deaths: Group | News

Dhaka, Bangladesh – Approximately 400 men and women were killed and pretty much 2 times that variety injured in extra than 300 street mishaps in the fortnight around the Eid al-Adha holiday seasons in Bangladesh this month.

It is the optimum amount of street accident deaths in the course of the Muslim festival considering the fact that the Bangladesh Passenger Welfare Association (BPWA) commenced compiling these types of data in 2016.

The South Asian country of 165 million folks has a person of the highest road incident and casualty rates in the entire world. The incidents rise sharply through the Eid holiday seasons when tens of millions of people today return to their homes in the countryside from cash Dhaka and other towns.

In accordance to the BPWA, at minimum 398 folks had been killed and 774 hurt in 319 road mishaps amongst July 3 and July 17. Eid al-Adha was celebrated on July 10 in the Muslim-vast majority place.

The past high of such fatalities took put this 12 months only for the duration of the Eid al-Fitr festival when 376 people have been killed and just about 1,500 hurt in 283 highway accidents concerning April 25 and May perhaps 9, states BPWA.

Bangladesh road accident
Bangladesh has 1 of the greatest highway incident and casualty prices in the entire world [File: Mahmud Hossain Opu/Al Jazeera]

Due to the fact almost 50 {c024931d10daf6b71b41321fa9ba9cd89123fb34a4039ac9f079a256e3c1e6e8} the deaths for the duration of the Eid al-Fitr holiday seasons included motorcycles, the governing administration banned two-wheeler vehicles on critical highways for 7 times from July 7 to July 13.

But BPWA facts showed about 30 per cent of accident deaths throughout Eid al-Adha holiday seasons concerned bikes as many men and women flouted the rules.

Altaf Hossain, 27, died in 1 such incident in Madhabdi place of Bangladesh’s central district of Narshingdi on July 11.

Hossain’s uncle Hiru Mia explained the deceased was carrying sacrificial meat to supply to a relative in a different district and had no selection but to use his motorcycle.

“On his way, he misplaced his bike’s control and fell into a ditch. His head personal injury was deadly. The health care provider could not help save him just after he was taken to a close by medical center,” Mia told Al Jazeera.

Bangladesh road safety
College students block a highway in Dhaka to demand improved street protection right after a scholar died in a road accident [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]

Deadly highway mishaps in Bangladesh have been on the rise irrespective of the govt stating it will lower them by 50 percent by 2030.

According to the law enforcement, at least 5,088 folks had been killed in 5,472 road accidents in 2021 – 30 per cent greater than the former 12 months.

The BPWA knowledge paints a bleaker photo – 7,809 fatalities and 9,039 injuries in 5,629 highway mishaps last year.

Angry by a rushing bus killing two substantial school learners in July 2018, tens of hundreds of college and college or university learners throughout Bangladesh strike the streets for a 7 days in an unprecedented protest.

The protests forced the federal government to move the Road Transportation Act, which released a quantity of actions to check out street accidents, together with repairing a least age and functioning several hours for skilled motorists and an crisis helpline to report mishaps.

Even with a regulation in position now, there is popular scepticism among individuals and gurus above any genuine improve on the floor.

When renowned filmmaker Tareq Masud and journalist Mishuk Munir died in a road incident in 2011, a 9-member authorities committee headed by a minister issued a quantity of recommendations to make the streets safer.

The panel suggested forming a Highway Safety Fund from the spending plan allotted for highway building jobs. It said the fund really should be used on highway basic safety awareness programmes and investigation.

At present, much more than 350 road design tasks are underneath way in Bangladesh, with a cumulative price of $5.1bn.

If just 1 p.c of the worth of these projects is stored aside for the Highway Protection Fund, the funds gathered could be $56m. However, no this sort of fund has been formed yet.

Designs on paper

A different important suggestion of the large-driven authorities committee was to superior educate motorists and streamline the approach of issuing driving licences, specified that Bangladesh’s highways are flooded with unskilled and unlicensed motorists.

According to data from the Bangladesh Highway Transportation Authority (BRTA), there are 3.4 million registered autos in the region. Nonetheless, just 1.92 million driving licences ended up issued by the agency, indicating there are additional than a million unlicensed drivers.

In 2012, the authorities planned to introduce driving courses in specialized educational facilities and schools under a Vocational Training Board. That strategy has not materialised however.

In the meantime, various BRTA drives in the final number of yrs located that about 80 unauthorised driving colleges throughout the place have been churning out thousands of fledgling motorists.

BRTA Chairman Noor Mohammad Majumder stated there are 41 BRTA-approved driving universities in Bangladesh, which include 26 in Dhaka.

“Our fingers are tied as these numbers [of driving schools] look tiny in entrance of hundreds of thousands of candidates,” he advised Al Jazeera.

Shamsul Haque, former director of the Incident Analysis Institute (ARI) of Bangladesh College of Engineering and Know-how, explained the authorities want to be extra resolute in guaranteeing highway security.

“Accidents in Bangladesh occur pretty much every single day but some accidents generate larger buzzes in the media,” he reported.

“Immediately immediately after people incidents, the governing administration announces some measure to stem general public outcry, but in the extensive operate they forget about about their commitments.”