The NSA's Winter of Discontent

Originally posted on The Huffington Post.

By By Laura W. Murphy, Director, ACLU Washington Legislative Office & Sandra Fulton, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

Even Your Avatar Can't Escape NSA Surveillance

It seems that literally no one is safe from the NSA. Even digital alter egos living in fantasy realms in the online gaming world are being caught up in the NSA's surveillance dragnet.

By By Robyn Greene, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

New Documents Show Lopsided Reliance on Secret Subpoenas

What happens when legislatures pass laws enabling law enforcement to obtain sensitive, private information about people without requiring any evidence of criminal activity, and without any outside oversight whatsoever?

By By Kade Crockford, Director, ACLU of Massachusetts Technology for Liberty Project

Placeholder image

Mass Location Tracking: It’s Not Just For the NSA

Thanks to Edward Snowden we now understand that the NSA runs many dragnet surveillance programs, some of which target Americans. But a story yesterday from Washington, D.C. public radio station WAMU is a reminder that dragnet surveillance is not just a tool of the NSA—the local police use mass surveillance as well.

By By Catherine Crump, Staff Attorney, ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project

Placeholder image

Should LGBT Activists in India Just Give Up?

Late last night, like many LGBT South Asian Americans, I waited anxiously to see how India's Supreme Court would rule on a colonial-era law that criminalized homosexuality. The ruling came in just after midnight Eastern Standard Time, and it was a major setback: the Court reversed a 2009 lower court judgment and restored the ban on homosexuality.

By By Shawn Jain, ACLU

Placeholder image

"One Man, One Vote": Nelson Mandela on Voting Rights

Last week, the world lost a great man, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.

By By Julie Ebenstein, Staff Attorney, Voting Rights Project, ACLU

Placeholder image

Congress Can Create a Smarter Criminal Justice System

The following op-ed was originally published by The Hill.

By By Laura W. Murphy, Director, ACLU Washington Legislative Office & Sandra Fulton, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

"Mail Covers" Case Another Reminder That Oversight Is a Constant Battle

Last week I wrote about how a central problem with reliance on the FISA Court as a principal pillar of NSA oversight is that the court, in an environment of extreme secrecy and without an adversarial proceeding, has no reliable means of determining whether its orders have been carried out. We have learned plenty in recent months about the agency’s failure to follow the law.

By By Jay Stanley, Senior Policy Analyst, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project

Placeholder image

Disappeared, Threatened with Torture, and Still Seeking Accountability

A federal district court in Washington will hear arguments this afternoon in the ACLU's lawsuit on behalf of American citizen Amir Meshal. In 2007, FBI agents orchestrated Mr. Meshal's secret detention for four months in East Africa. During that time, Mr. Meshal was threatened with torture and rendered between three different countries – Kenya, Somalia, and Ethiopia – in an attempt to coerce a false confession from him. He was never charged with a crime.

By By Jonathan Hafetz, Associate Professor of Law, Seton Hall University School of Law

Placeholder image