Are CIA Cyber-Spooks Hacking Americans' Computers?

At Wednesday's Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, titled "Global Security Threats," Senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Mark Udall (D-Colo.) hinted that CIA agents might be engaging in abusive cyber operations against Americans. And CIA Director John Brennan did little to dispel the notion.

By By Robyn Greene, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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"It Was Mostly the Middle Easterners Who Got the Special Screening"

Transportation Security Administration employees subjected "Middle Easterners" to extra screening based solely on national origin, diverted "rude" passengers to retaliatory pat-down searches, and snickered at our "every fold and dimple on full awful display" from full-body scanners, according to former TSA employee Jason Edward Harrington. In a withering exposé entitled "Dear America, I Saw You Naked," Mr. Harrington draws back the curtain on the unfairness and absurdity of airport screening practices.

By By Hugh Handeyside, Staff Attorney, ACLU, National Security Project

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This Week in Civil Liberties (01/31/2014)

In what state are politicians considering a bill that would allow hospital staff to refuse to participate in any phase of patient care related to ending a pregnancy?

By By Rekha Arulanantham, ACLU

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An Important Victory for Indian Tribes

This week, the ACLU won an important battle on the road toward protecting the rights of American Indian children and their parents and tribes. Chief Judge Jeffrey L. Viken of South Dakota's federal District Court ruled that a lawsuit filed by the ACLU in March of 2013 can go forward, rejecting motions filed by the defendants that sought to have the case dismissed. The suit, brought on behalf of the Oglala and Rosebud Sioux Indian Tribes and a class of Indian parents, aims to ensure that state courts in South Dakota respect the rights granted to Indian parents by the Constitution's Due Process Clause and the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA). The defendants include a state court judge, a county prosecutor, and the director of the South Dakota Department of Social Services.

By By Peter Beauchamp, ACLU Racial Justice Program

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How the Phone Dragnet Slipped Through Cracks in Oversight

Last week, the Privacy & Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) issued a scathing report about the government's use of Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect the phone records of every American for the last seven years. While much attention has rightly been paid to the Board's ultimate recommendation that the government end this bulk-collection program, the report also gives a comprehensive factual account of how the program began.

By By Brett Max Kaufman, Legal Fellow, ACLU National Security Project

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The Internet You Know and Love is in Danger

Net neutrality – the principle that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) must treat all data on the Internet equally – is vital to free speech. But earlier this month, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the FCC's net neutrality rules, jeopardizing the openness of the Internet that we have come to take for granted.

By By Sandra Fulton, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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Texas should take steps to ensure no family endures tragedy like this again

Guantanamo Review Board: This is Not What Transparency Looks Like

At 9:15 a.m. yesterday morning, the flat-screen monitor in Arlington, Virginia, came to life, revealing a small room inside what appeared to be a temporary structure.

By By Zak Newman, Washington Legislative Office, ACLU

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NSA Spy Target Challenges Warrantless Wiretapping Law

The ACLU today joined a new challenge to the constitutionality of the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 (FAA) — the surveillance law that gives the NSA virtually unfettered access to the international phone calls and emails of U.S. citizens and residents. Disclosures over the last eight months have confirmed that the NSA is using the law to engage in dragnet surveillance, siphoning communications off the Internet backbone and also collecting them directly from companies like Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and others.

By By Patrick C. Toomey, Staff Attorney, ACLU National Security Project

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