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‘Dismissed’ Is Punch Line to Joke

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From Associated Press

A man arrested after telling lawyer jokes at a courthouse got the last laugh when a grand jury dismissed the disorderly conduct charge against him.

“It’s still legal in America to tell jokes -- even about lawyers,” said 70-year-old Harvey Kash’s lawyer, Ron Kuby, about Monday’s decision.

Kash testified he was exercising his 1st Amendment right when he shared a few lawyer jokes with his friend, Carl Lanzisera, 65, as they waited to enter a Long Island courthouse last month.

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Kash and Lanzisera are founders of Americans for Legal Reform, a group that uses confrontational tactics to urge greater public access to the courts. They said they had mocked lawyers outside courts for years.

“How do you tell when a lawyer is lying?” Kash reportedly asked. “His lips are moving,” the pair howled in unison.

Some people giggled, but a lawyer in the line told them to pipe down and reported them to court officers. They were arrested on allegations of being abusive. The charge against Lanzisera was dropped earlier.

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