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,under the Privacy Act.
b. available to the public under the Freedom of Information Act,
unless they contain trade secrets, information related to national security, or information that, if disclosed, would invade personal privacy.
c. available to the public under the Government in the Sunshine Act, unless it concerns information about individuals protected by the Privacy Act.
d. available to the public, whether it concerns individuals or not,
under the Federal Sunshine Act
e. None of the above

2.In Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, a state sales tax was imposed on out-of-state firms doing mail-order business with North Dakota residents.This law was found:
a. unconstitutional violation of the necessary and proper clause
b. constitutional because it involves all mail-order firms
c. constitutional because it involves interstate commerce
d. unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment rights of themail-order businesses
e. unconstitutional violation of the commerce clause

2007-08-01 03:30:44 · 1 answers · asked by austin 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

1 answers

1..

Well, the Sunshine Act [5 U.S.C. 552b] deals with govt meetings. And it's pretty safe to say that all documents are not always and automatically secret... which leaves B or D.

2.

What does the "necessary and proper" clause say and how is it implemented? Does it have any direct meaning on its own, or just extend other enumerated powers?

Which leaves you analyzing the holding in Quill did the court find it constitutional or unconstitutional -- that eliminates two of the other options.

So, just look at the holding (and the majority opinion) and see what gets discussed.

2007-08-01 20:37:26 · answer #1 · answered by coragryph 7 · 1 0

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