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By Blog of Rights: Official Blog of the American Civil Liberties Union
Max Soffar has a long history of self-medicating. When he was four, his parents found him passed out next to their car, gas cap in hand. Since birth, Max's brain has been damaged. That damage has been made worse by years of physical and mental abuse by adoptive parents and staff at mental institutions.
By By Sarah Solon, Communications Strategist, ACLU
Every time they throw my brother into solitary, he loses contact visits. When we visit, he's behind glass, or we can only see him via video. We can't hug him. He can't hold his new baby niece.
By By Nzinga A. Harrison, MD
On August 1, President Obama acknowledged again that "We tortured some folks." Last week, one of those people, Abd al-Rahim Hussayn al-Nashiri, was back in the courtroom in the Guantánamo military commissions, where he faces the death penalty for his alleged role in the bombing of the USS Cole.
While the
By By Marcellene Hearn, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU National Security Project
Politicians in South Carolina don't have a great track record with science. Earlier this year, creationists in the state legislature tried to derail an 8-year-old girl's request to make the woolly mammoth the state fossil. They demanded the resolution also declare that the wooly mammoth was "created on the Sixth Day with the other beasts of the field."
The creat
By By Carrie Ellen Sager, PFRB Legal Fellow, ACLU
This piece originally appeared on the Monkey Cage blog at washingtonpost.com.
By By Gabe Rottman, Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
The government is adding people to its already bloated watchlisting system at breakneck pace, and it's still hungry for more. That's the unavoidable conclusion from documents published yesterday in The Intercept.
By By Hugh Handeyside, Staff Attorney, ACLU, National Security Project
This piece originally appeared at The National Journal.
By Carl Takei, ACLU National Prison Project
Wow. Twelve years. The time has flown by. Seems like just yesterday that the Justice Department sent over its torture memos to then-CIA General Counsel John Rizzo, ramping up a CIA torture program that horribly abused more than a hundred men, killing a few of them. No one at the CIA was ever even charged with a crime. Some agents, in fact, got job promotions.
By By Chris Anders, Senior Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
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