As we suspected, local law enforcement officials are borrowing cell phone tracking devices known as “stingrays” from the U.S. Marshals Service—and police are deliberately concealing the use of stingrays in court documents submitted to judges in criminal investigations.
By By Maria Kayanan, Associate Legal Director, ACLU of Florida
Last night marked the first executions in this country since the horrifically botched execution of Clayton Lockett in April.
By By Cassandra Stubbs, ACLU Capital Punishment Project
Welcome to Alabama, the state of the never-ending seat belt ticket.
By By Sarah Solon, Communications Strategist, ACLU
Something remarkable happened last night: A bipartisan majority in the House of Representatives agreed on something.
By By Chris Calabrese, Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
In the second season opener of Orange is the New Black, the show's heroine Piper uses her breakfast to paint a bird on the wall. A month alone in a cell the size of a parking spot has clearly messed with her head. Thirty minutes later, a row of naked prisoners opt to bend over and "spread 'em" rather than be sent to solitary. Mentions of "the SHU" — Security Housing Unit or Segregated Housing Unit — continue like this. In almost every episode of the second season of Orange Is the New Black, solitary confinement looms large, representing a villain even more terrifying than Vee, the show's new violent and manipulative matriarch.
By By Helen Vera, National Prison Project Fellow, ACLU
By all accounts, Landon Wilson served with honor in the U.S. Navy during a short, but distinguished military career. He was trained as a cryptologic technician, at great expense to the military, and eventually served in Afghanistan where he assisted with Special Operations missions. The reason Landon's military career was cut short was not of his own choosing, and it was certainly not a reflection on his capabilities or desire to serve.
By By Ian S. Thompson, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a decision today in Jones v. Dirty World Entertainment, a case in which the ACLU filed an amicus brief alongside other organizations urging the Sixth Circuit to reverse a lower court’s decision holding a website and its editor accountable for defamatory posts submitted by the website’s users. (Here is our prior blog post explaining the case, and the website itself, TheDirty.com.)
By By Lee Rowland, Staff Attorney, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project
It was a frigid winter night, and my daughter Sarah was in her college years. She called to ask me to drive up to Burlington, Vermont, as soon as possible. She had something important to tell me. During the four-hour drive, my mind raced with the possibilities of what could be wrong. When I got there Sarah burst into tears. She wanted to tell me that she and a female friend were in love and were moving in together.
By By Michael Grayson Norris
At a time when Americans seem to be increasingly polarized on almost every conceivable issue, a recent study found one issue the vast majority can agree on: Our electronic privacy laws are out of date.
By By Sandra Fulton, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
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