In Guantánamo Death Penalty Case, Torture Matters

I spent much of last week at the Post Theater in Fort Meade, watching the closed-circuit feed of the pre-trial military commissions hearings in the case of Abd al-Rahim Hussayn Muhammed al-Nashiri, who faces the death penalty for his alleged role in the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole.

By By Marcellene Hearn, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU National Security Project

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Everybody Wants to Reform ECPA - So Where's the White House?

A coalition of over 70 organizations sent a letter yesterday to President Obama, urging him to support a clean update to our online privacy laws and warning him about the dangers of carving out any exceptions that would give some government agencies warrantless access to our online communications. The message was simple:

By By Sandra Fulton, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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On the Agenda: April 28 – May 2

Remember that feeling on the very last night of summer vacation or spring break, when it begins to slowly dawn on you that yes, you really do have to go back to school tomorrow. Even worse, you just know that all the homework you didn’t manage to finish before you left will just be sitting there patiently, waiting for you. I’d imagine that’s rather how our Senators and Representatives feel this week, as another recess draws slowly to a close.

By By Meghan Groob, Media Strategist, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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Nebraska's Ban on Gay Foster Parents is Beatable

The Cornhusker State's discriminatory ban on gay foster parents looks increasingly rickety.

By By James Esseks, Director, ACLU Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender & AIDS Project

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Shocking Kids into Compliance

The Judge Rotenberg Center, a residential school in northern Massachusetts, prides itself on teaching students with disabilities who have the most challenging behavioral issues. The school takes kids with severe intellectual disabilities – autism, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, and a range of psychiatric disabilities – and then its employees attach electrodes to their arms, legs, and stomach, and shock them into submission.

By By Susan Mizner, Disability Counsel, ACLU

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Resegregation: The Unfulfilled Promise of Brown

Elizabeth "Tizzy" Lockman lives with her daughter, Sophie, in the same Wilmington, Del., house where Tizzy grew up. She had hoped to send her daughter to the same elementary school she attended as a little girl, but soon discovered that the school she knew in the 1980s had changed dramatically.

By By Carmel Ferrer

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Crash the Wedding Event of the Year

What's the #1 rule for crashing a wedding?

By By Alicia Gay, ACLU

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Gov. Brewer, Heed Your Own Advice

This piece originally appeared as an OpEd in the Arizona Republic.
Several we

By By Alessandra Soler, ACLU of Arizona

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We're All Losers After the Supreme Court's Decision in Schuette

There are many individuals and groups in Michigan who lost as a result of yesterday's United States Supreme Court decision in Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action.

By By Dennis Parker, Director, ACLU Racial Justice Program

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