In this instance, it is likely that the exception relating to the right to freedom of expression and freedom of the media (set out in Articles 17 and 80 of our proposed Regulation) would apply.
The facts of the Seeman case set forth above came from articles in the ABA Journal, the San Fransisco Chronicle, the Oakland Tribune, and the San Jose Mercury News.
The articles were fawning chronicles of on-set visits, retrospectives of pioneering visionaries, and barely edited interviews with scream queens and fright-film directors.
In a series ofarticles in the Lancet timed to coincide with the Olympics, researchers from 16 countries set out the scale of the health burden created by physical inactivity.
For 20 years, federal health and justice officials have concocted and applied a warped setof legal principles which essentially prohibit medical product makers from sharing truthful information (even peer-reviewed journal articles) with doctors about off-label uses.