
21 Monday-Friday 10 am-5 pm By appointment only on the weekends. On behalf of Otter Tail County, we would like to congratulate the Fergus Falls Daily Journal for its 150 years of service in publishing a local paper. The department may decide it is "not going to undertake the expense and trouble of hiring copyright counsel and sending out takedowns and case-and-desist letters, or in lawsuits", explained Ms Rosenblatt. We are your premier flooring and tile contractors. The Crap Wildlife Photography Facebook group is a place where people. However, the final decision would lay with the Fulton County Sheriff's Office as to whether to sue the Trump campaign and any others that have used the mugshot for financial gain. The Daily Journal is an American, English language daily newspaper headquartered in Fergus Falls, Otter Tail County, Minnesota. Donna Solin, right, stands with Brad Bushinger at her retirement party celebrating 45 years of service. Fergus Hurst is a film and digital photographer who captures landscapes, wildlife, portrait, commercial and documentary images. WE ARE COMING AFTER YOU you will NOT SCAM DONORS." Chris LaCivita, one of Trump's top advisers, tweeted: "If you are a campaign, PAC, scammer and you trying to raise money off the mugshot of and you have not received prior permission. By Mary Bethel Olson/The Daily Journal ADAPTABLE: Geese are able to adapt to cold temperatures and. However, the Trump campaign appeared to be aware of the potential legal violation. FREEZING WATER: Geese and ducks gather near the levee on the Otter Tail River in Fergus Falls. 'went down like an eggshell' according to the Fergus Falls Daily Journal. Adding that since the campaign if profiting off the image, it also cannot claim fair use. Edith Deal Edith Louise Deal, 84, of Farmington, formerly of Fergus Falls, died Friday, Dec. Noteworthy Events Photographers and postcard publishers saw dollar signs when. Trump's campaign did not make any alterations to the mugshot, so he cannot claim he substantially altered it from its original in a way to create something new, said MSNBC's Dean Obeidallah.
