oddly enough


oddly enough

Maine sues Planned Parenthood foe, says he yelled too loudly

PORTLAND, Maine

Maine’s attorney general said Tuesday that she has sued a protester who she says yelled so loudly outside a Planned Parenthood facility that he disrupted health care services there.

Attorney General Janet Mills filed the complaint against Brian Ingalls, 26, under the state’s civil-rights act. Mills said he violated the rights of patients at the Portland facility Oct. 23 when the sound of his voice directed to the second floor interfered with the delivery of health care services.

A police officer warned Ingalls, a frequent protester outside the clinic, to stop yelling so loudly, but he did not, the complaint said. Mills said that Ingalls had the right to protest but that the Maine Civil Rights Act makes clear it’s a violation to intentionally make noise at a volume that can be heard within a medical treatment facility.

“While protesters have every right to say anything they want in a public area in the vicinity of a medical facility, they are not permitted to disrupt another citizen’s health care services,” Mills said.

Ingalls, of Lisbon, declined to comment when reached by email. Mills’ lawsuit asks the court to prevent him from coming within 50 feet of Planned Parenthood facilities and orders him to pay up to $5,000 for each violation of the Maine Civil Rights Act.

The lawsuit comes a few weeks after the city of Portland settled a lawsuit filed by anti-abortion activists against an ordinance that established a protest-free buffer zone around the clinic. A judgment approved by a federal judge said the city must pay more than $56,000 in legal fees as part of the settlement. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2014 that similar buffer zones in Massachusetts violated free speech rights.

Planned Parenthood lauded Mills’ move, saying it defends patients’ rights to privacy and safety.

New Hampshire water-park owner chains self to tower

CANDIA, N.H.

The owner of a New Hampshire water park facing foreclosure has chained himself to the top of a slide tower and is hoping for a financial miracle.

Kevin Dumont said on his Facebook page he’s not looking for a handout, just someone to help him prevent a Dec. 2 auction of Liquid Planet in Candia. He promises to stay atop the tower 24/7 and says it’s a “last ditch” effort to save the small business he created.

Two 40-foot slides at the park were shuttered in August when regulators found high levels of bacteria and said Dumont opened the attractions without a required review.

In another Facebook post he thanked friends for pizza, beer and company and asked if anyone knows how to contact presidential candidates who have been blanketing the state.

Associated Press