In a ruling that is being compared to the case that led to free agency in baseball, a federal judge in California upheld an arbitration panel's decision to release talk-radio host Michael Savage from a contract with his former syndicator, Talk Radio Network.
Savage's lawyer, Dan Horowitz, called it a landmark case for talk radio.
"Michael is to talk radio what Curt Flood was to Major League Baseball," Horowitz told WND, referring to the player who challenged baseball's reserve clause, which kept a player bound to his team even after fulfillment of his contract.
Savage told WND the ruling "should free talent from the threats and extortionist behavior of ruthless Old-Hollywood types who can still be found in the corners of the radio industry."
"For me, personally, it finalizes a struggle to perform for my audience in an atmosphere of freedom, not working on a 'radio plantation,'" he said.
The judge who issued the order Thursday, Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, was appointed by President Obama.
"This should give all of us faith in the legal system," Savage said, "where there is increasing distrust and cynicism about government in general. In this case, an Obama-appointed judge followed the law without bias."
Savage said the case cost him $1 million in legal fees "and many lost days and nights."
MORE STORY HERE http://www.wnd.com/2013/05/michael-savage-wins-landmark-case-in-federal-court/
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