Privacy and Surveillance

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U.S. Supreme Court
Apr 2022
FBI v. Fazaga Plaintiffs

Privacy and Surveillance

+2 Ƶ

FBI v. Fazaga

In a case scheduled to be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court on November 8, 2021, three Muslim Americans are challenging the FBI’s secret spying on them and their communities based on their religion, in violation of the Constitution and federal law. In what will likely be a landmark case, the plaintiffs — Yassir Fazaga, Ali Uddin Malik, and Yasser Abdelrahim — insist that the FBI cannot escape accountability for violating their religious freedom by invoking “state secrets.” The plaintiffs are represented by the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at UCLA School of Law, the Ƶof Southern California, the Ƶ, the Council for American Islamic Relations, and the law firm of Hadsell Stormer Renick & Dai.
Fbi V. Fazaga. Explore Case.

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35 Privacy and Surveillance Cases

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Court Case
Oct 2014

Privacy and Surveillance

Ƶv. FBI - FOIA Case for Records Relating to Patriot Act Section 215

In May 2011, the Ƶfiled a Freedom of Information Act request with the Justice Department seeking information about the government's use and interpretation of Patriot Act Section 215, which authorizes the government to obtain “any tangible thing” that is “relevant to” a terrorism investigation. Our subsequent FOIA lawsuit to enforce the request compelled the government to release dozens of documents, although many others were withheld from the Ƶand the public. The Ƶcontinued to fight for additional disclosures concerning the government’s use of Section 215 to secretly collect Americans’ information in bulk, but the district court eventually granted the government’s motion for summary judgment in March 2015.
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Aclu V. Fbi - Foia Case For Records Relating To Patriot Act Section 215. Explore Case.
Court Case
Oct 2014
Switchboard

Privacy and Surveillance

Ƶv. FBI - FOIA Case for Records Relating to Patriot Act Section 215

In May 2011, the Ƶfiled a Freedom of Information Act request with the Justice Department seeking information about the government's use and interpretation of Patriot Act Section 215, which authorizes the government to obtain “any tangible thing” that is “relevant to” a terrorism investigation. Our subsequent FOIA lawsuit to enforce the request compelled the government to release dozens of documents, although many others were withheld from the Ƶand the public. The Ƶcontinued to fight for additional disclosures concerning the government’s use of Section 215 to secretly collect Americans’ information in bulk, but the district court eventually granted the government’s motion for summary judgment in March 2015.
Aclu V. Fbi - Foia Case For Records Relating To Patriot Act Section 215. Explore Case.
NSA Building
Court Case
Sep 2014

Privacy and Surveillance

Ƶv. NSA - Challenge to Warrantless Wiretapping

In 2006, in the first federal challenge ever argued against the NSA's warrantless wiretapping program, the Ƶdefeated the Bush administration when a district court declared the program unconstitutional. But in July 2007, the 6th Circuit overturned that decision. The Ƶasked the Supreme Court of the United States to consider the ruling, but in February 2008, the Court declined to review the challenge.
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Aclu V. Nsa - Challenge To Warrantless Wiretapping. Explore Case.
Court Case
Sep 2014
NSA Building

Privacy and Surveillance

Ƶv. NSA - Challenge to Warrantless Wiretapping

In 2006, in the first federal challenge ever argued against the NSA's warrantless wiretapping program, the Ƶdefeated the Bush administration when a district court declared the program unconstitutional. But in July 2007, the 6th Circuit overturned that decision. The Ƶasked the Supreme Court of the United States to consider the ruling, but in February 2008, the Court declined to review the challenge.
Aclu V. Nsa - Challenge To Warrantless Wiretapping. Explore Case.
Domestic Surveillance
California
Jul 2014

Privacy and Surveillance

Gill v. DOJ – Challenge to Government's Suspicious Activity Reporting Program

The Ƶof California, the ACLU, Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Asian Law Caucus, and the law firm Bingham McCutchen have filed a lawsuit challenging the federal government's Suspicious Activity Reporting program — a vast expansion of the federal government's domestic intelligence network. The SAR program supposedly facilitates the collection and sharing of information about activity that appears suspicious, but in practice it targets First Amendment-protected activity, encourages racial and religious profiling, and violates federal law. The plaintiffs are five U.S. citizens whose information has been entered into counterterrorism databases for engaging in lawful conduct, and who have been subject to unwarranted law enforcement and scrutiny. The lawsuit was filed in July 2014 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. In March 2017, the District Court granted the government’s motion for summary judgment, upholding the SAR program’s standard for data collection. We are appealing that ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
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Gill V. Doj – Challenge To Government's Suspicious Activity Reporting Program. Explore Case.
California
Jul 2014
Domestic Surveillance

Privacy and Surveillance

Gill v. DOJ – Challenge to Government's Suspicious Activity Reporting Program

The Ƶof California, the ACLU, Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Asian Law Caucus, and the law firm Bingham McCutchen have filed a lawsuit challenging the federal government's Suspicious Activity Reporting program — a vast expansion of the federal government's domestic intelligence network. The SAR program supposedly facilitates the collection and sharing of information about activity that appears suspicious, but in practice it targets First Amendment-protected activity, encourages racial and religious profiling, and violates federal law. The plaintiffs are five U.S. citizens whose information has been entered into counterterrorism databases for engaging in lawful conduct, and who have been subject to unwarranted law enforcement and scrutiny. The lawsuit was filed in July 2014 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. In March 2017, the District Court granted the government’s motion for summary judgment, upholding the SAR program’s standard for data collection. We are appealing that ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Gill V. Doj – Challenge To Government's Suspicious Activity Reporting Program. Explore Case.
FBI
Court Case
Oct 2013

Privacy and Surveillance

+4 Ƶ

Ƶv. FBI - eGuardian FOIA Lawsuit

Government documents obtained by the Ƶshow that nationwide programs that collect so-called Suspicious Activity Reports provide inadequate privacy safeguards and guidance on the definition of suspicious activity, leading to violations of Americans' First Amendment and privacy rights, and to racial and religious profiling.
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Aclu V. Fbi - Eguardian Foia Lawsuit. Explore Case.
Court Case
Oct 2013
FBI

Privacy and Surveillance

+4 Ƶ

Ƶv. FBI - eGuardian FOIA Lawsuit

Government documents obtained by the Ƶshow that nationwide programs that collect so-called Suspicious Activity Reports provide inadequate privacy safeguards and guidance on the definition of suspicious activity, leading to violations of Americans' First Amendment and privacy rights, and to racial and religious profiling.
Aclu V. Fbi - Eguardian Foia Lawsuit. Explore Case.
Warrantless Electronic Communications FOIA Requests
Court Case
May 2013

Privacy and Surveillance

Warrantless Electronic Communications FOIA Requests

The Ƶhas filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to learn more about the government’s practice of reading people’s email, text messages, social networking feeds and other private electronic communications without a warrant.
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Warrantless Electronic Communications Foia Requests. Explore Case.
Court Case
May 2013
Warrantless Electronic Communications FOIA Requests

Privacy and Surveillance

Warrantless Electronic Communications FOIA Requests

The Ƶhas filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to learn more about the government’s practice of reading people’s email, text messages, social networking feeds and other private electronic communications without a warrant.
Warrantless Electronic Communications Foia Requests. Explore Case.
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