As a deaf person and the wife of a police officer, I think it's extremely important for people who are deaf and hard of hearing to be aware of their rights when dealing with the police.
By By Marlee Matlin, Actress
In a matter of minutes, I went from seeking justice, to bearing witness, to being racially profiled.
By By Reverend Elmer Zavala Gonzalez, Minister Member of Mid-Kentucky Presbytery
SPOILER WARNING: This post discusses major plot points of the new Captain America movie.
By By Josh Bell, Media Strategist, ACLU
The government is using shaky legal arguments to silence major Internet companies without giving them – or the public – the opportunity to respond. In three separate recent cases, the government has sent a grand jury subpoena to Yahoo or Twitter and requested a gag order from a magistrate judge, attempting to bar these tech companies from informing the customers in question. To make matters worse, the government won't disclose its reasoning for requesting the gag, effectively shutting the public out of the courthouse without any explanation.
By By Bennett Stein, ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project
A very important government report on privacy and cybersecurity programs flew under the radar last week.
By By Michelle Richardson, Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
As a fourth-generation Arizona rancher I have a strong attachment to the land my great grandfather homesteaded back in 1896. But ever since the US government built the border fence and sent thousands of Border Patrol agents to the Southwest, my property rights are violated every day.
By By John Ladd
GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba — What would it take for you to trust a stranger with your life?
By By Brett Max Kaufman, Legal Fellow, ACLU National Security Project
We know that cuts to early voting are bad for voters. But just how bad are they?
By By Faith Barksdale, Legal Assistant, ACLU
When we were little, we used to tell our mama she had good ears. My little sister and I would whisper under the covers in our bed after lights out, and somehow mom could always hear us. She'd tell us to quit talking and go to sleep.
By By Wendy George, Sister of commuted life-without-parole prisoner, Stephanie George
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