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<DIV><FONT size=2>Very important issues of privacy and freedom of
expression!!!!:</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message -----
<DIV style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; font-color: black"><B>From:</B> <A
title=ACLUOnline@aclu.org href="mailto:ACLUOnline@aclu.org">ACLU Online</A>
</DIV>
<DIV><B>To:</B> <A title=waf@moscow.com
href="mailto:waf@moscow.com">waf@moscow.com</A> </DIV>
<DIV><B>Sent:</B> Friday, August 20, 2010 1:43 PM</DIV>
<DIV><B>Subject:</B> Your Digital Privacy, John Doe Revealed, a Very Different
Internet, and More</DIV></DIV>
<DIV><BR></DIV>
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<TD bgColor=#e5e1e1 vAlign=top width=210><BR><IMG
alt="In This Issue"
src="http://action.aclu.org/images/content/pagebuilder/28980.jpg"
width=161 height=23> <BR><BR><SPAN
style="FONT-FAMILY: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; COLOR: #333333; FONT-SIZE: 12px"><A
href="#mstory1">FBI Partially Lifts Gag Order on NSL
Recipient</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A
href="#mstory2">Is Your Digital Privacy at Risk?</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A href="#mstory3">ACLU Sues
Mississippi School for Excluding Teenager Wearing Tuxedo from
Yearbook</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A
href="#mstory4">A Disturbing Vision for the Future </A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A href="#mstory5">Kevin Keith
Clemency Request Rejected by Ohio Parole Board</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A href="#sstory0">Bienvenue,
Guantánamo! A "Civil Liberties Minute" Podcast</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A href="#sstory1">New Reports on
9/11 Interrogation Tapes Underscore Need For Full
Accountability and Transparency</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A href="#sstory2">A Vote for Women,
A Vote for CEDAW</A> <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 22px"><A
name=sstory0></A><STRONG>Bienvenue, Guantánamo! A "Civil
Liberties Minute" Podcast</STRONG><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=W9eKCts-6Qzv8506uhSSuA.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 hspace=5 alt="" align=right
src="https://secure2.convio.net/aclu/images/content/pagebuilder/36421.gif"
width=100 height=100></A>Want to get a closer look at
Guantánamo Bay? Take a virtual press tour in this Civil
Liberties Minute. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 12px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=MJNFUUzGYnFB5kxZ23xe_A.."
target=_blank><STRONG>>> Listen to the
podcast</STRONG></A>. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="#top">back to top</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><A name=sstory1></A><STRONG>New
Reports on 9/11 Interrogation Tapes Underscore Need For Full
Accountability and Transparency</STRONG><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">This week, an Associated Press
report provided the first public details about CIA tapes of
interrogations of accused 9/11 conspirator Ramzi Binalshibh.
The ACLU requested information from the government about these
tapes last week, specifically asking why the CIA appears never
to have noted the tapes' existence in the ACLU's long-running
litigation over records relating to the treatment of
detainees. The government has not yet responded. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">According to the AP report, the
tapes were discovered in 2007 under a desk in the CIA's
Counterterrorism Center, and their existence was first
revealed by the government in a letter sent that year to two
federal judges. Prior to that letter, the government had
denied the tapes' existence. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Many critical records were destroyed
by the CIA, including at least 92 other interrogation
videotapes depicting waterboarding and other "enhanced
interrogation techniques." The ACLU continues to believe that
the CIA's destruction of those videotapes was in violation of
court orders and the Freedom of Information Act. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Accountability for torture is a
legal, political, and moral imperative. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Take action:
</STRONG><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=CLpvTcv5byNgQmEtO_LmSQ.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Ask Attorney General Holder to hold
responsible those involved in the Bush torture
program.</STRONG></A> <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="#top">back to top</A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=aGh0AEQU65OCMUvRcU3Neg.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0
alt="Help fund us with just a click. Vote now at CREDO"
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<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><A
name=sstory2></A><STRONG>A Vote for Women, A Vote for
CEDAW</STRONG><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">August 26
marks the 90th anniversary of Women's Equality Day, when women
in the U.S. finally won the right to vote. To mark this
special occasion, let's pressure members of Congress to ratify
the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) so we can continue to
make more progress in the ongoing fight for women's rights.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">CEDAW is a landmark
international treaty that affirms principles of fundamental
human rights and equality for women around the world and
provides a practical blueprint for translating those
principles into reality. Nearly every country in the world has
ratified CEDAW; the United States is one of only seven that
have not—together with Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Nauru, Palau, and
Tonga. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">That could change
this year. It takes the votes of 67 senators to ratify a
treaty, and President Obama, key Senators, and more than 140
organizations nationwide have expressed their support for the
treaty's ratification. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">U.S.
ratification of CEDAW would lead to greater opportunity and
access for women and girls in the United States and around the
world, and would send a strong signal to other governments
that protecting women's human rights is a global priority.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">So as we celebrate the 90th
anniversary of women's suffrage, we call on all women and men
to exercise the power of your votes in this election year to
tell your Senators that they must demonstrate their commitment
to women's rights and ratify CEDAW. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=FfF_bTHAK68GcLLtBzzRRg.."
target=_blank><STRONG>>> Read more about
CEDAW.</STRONG></A> <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=Z7bUgZkBacnHKAIqOLNG4A.."
target=_blank><STRONG>>> Take action: Tell your members
of Congress to ratify CEDAW.</STRONG></A> <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A href="#top">back to top</A>
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=i70_crb3q8mPXI4EQ2WXVQ.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 alt="Send to a friend"
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width=154 height=33></A><BR>Do you know somebody who would be
interested in getting news about the ACLU and what we're doing
to protect civil liberties? <EM>Help us spread the word about
ACLU Online — <A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=YUg7UqgTA22vSlZbO1U8Vw.."
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<TD
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 10px; PADDING-LEFT: 10px; PADDING-RIGHT: 10px; PADDING-TOP: 10px"
vAlign=top width=441><SPAN
style="FONT-FAMILY: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; COLOR: #333333; FONT-SIZE: 12px">
<P
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align=right>August 20, 2010</P><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><!-- STORY 1 --><A name=mstory1></A>
<H2
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 0pt; MARGIN: 0pt; PADDING-LEFT: 0pt; PADDING-RIGHT: 0pt; COLOR: #25547a; FONT-SIZE: 16px; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; PADDING-TOP: 0pt">FBI
Partially Lifts Gag Order on NSL Recipient</H2><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">
<TABLE style="WIDTH: 170px; MARGIN-LEFT: 15px" border=0
cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=8 align=right>
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<TR>
<TD
style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-RIGHT: #cccccc 1px solid"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=XpqO56MEWsaQpVf5uMjaBQ.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 hspace=0 alt=""
src="https://secure2.convio.net/aclu/images/content/pagebuilder/36535.jpg"
width=170 height=170></A> <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 5px"><SPAN
style="FONT-FAMILY: arial,sans-serif; COLOR: #404040; FONT-SIZE: 12px">Tell
Congress to reject any expansion of the use of NSLs.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 8px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=zFyZ61sX5oDuW1FkUfBXYQ.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 hspace=0 alt="" align=right
src="http://action.aclu.org/images/content/pagebuilder/35601.gif"
width=170 height=40></A> </SPAN></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>We
can finally say it: John Doe is Nicholas Merrill. For the
first time since the FBI served him with a national security
letter (NSL) and placed him under gag more than six years ago,
Nick can finally speak out about his experiences as the first
person to ever bring a challenge against NSLs. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">The ACLU filed a lawsuit challenging
the NSL statute and the gag order on behalf of Nick in April
2004, which resulted in numerous court rulings finding the NSL
statute unconstitutional. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">NSLs are secret record demands the
FBI issues to obtain access to personal customer records from
internet service providers, libraries, financial institutions
and credit reporting agencies without court approval or even
suspicion of wrongdoing. Because the FBI can gag NSL
recipients to prohibit them from disclosing anything about the
record demands they receive, the FBI's use and potential abuse
of the NSL power has been shrouded in excessive secrecy. While
the NSL served on Merrill stated that he was prohibited from
telling anyone about it, he decided to challenge the demand in
court because he believed that the FBI was ordering him to
turn over constitutionally protected information about one of
his clients. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Thanks to
Nick's actions, courts have now recognized the need for
judicial oversight of the government's dangerous NSL gag
power. But while misuse and abuse of the NSL power has been
widely documented, Congress has neglected to reform the NSL
statute to rein in those abuses and bring it in line with the
court rulings in our case. And now, the Obama administration
is seeking to expand the statute to allow the FBI to demand
even more records without court approval. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Take action:
</STRONG><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=oSdX170miucDU5b58YQvoA.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Tell Congress to reject any expansion of
the use of NSLs. </STRONG></A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A href="#top">back to
top</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><!-- STORY 2 -->
<DIV
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 10px; PADDING-LEFT: 10px; PADDING-RIGHT: 10px; BACKGROUND: #e0eaf2; PADDING-TOP: 10px"><A
name=mstory2></A>
<H2
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 0pt; MARGIN: 0pt; PADDING-LEFT: 0pt; PADDING-RIGHT: 0pt; COLOR: #000; FONT-SIZE: 16px; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; PADDING-TOP: 0pt">Is
Your Digital Privacy at Risk?</H2><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=43oQF_l1C-lcYAiop0dNjQ.."
target=_blank><IMG
style="BORDER-BOTTOM: white 2px solid; BORDER-LEFT: white 2px solid; BORDER-TOP: white 2px solid; BORDER-RIGHT: white 2px solid"
alt="How exposed are you? Take the quiz to find out!"
align=right
src="https://secure2.convio.net/aclu/images/content/pagebuilder/36490.gif"></A>
With each passing day, we're leaving a trail of more and more
personal data. Take cell phones, for example—90% of Americans
carry one, each of which can be used as a tracking device. At
the same time, the government's appetite for our electronic
information is out-of-control. The National Security Agency is
intercepting 1.7 billion emails, phone calls and other
communications per day. <BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">The
combination of rapidly-advancing technology and ever-expanding
government surveillance could be putting your private
information at risk. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Find out how
exposed you are—and what you can do about it. </STRONG><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=axwno-udKqOAljmaYODM-w.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Take the quiz now. </STRONG></A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A href="#top">back to top</A>
</DIV><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><!-- STORY 3 --><A
name=mstory3></A>
<H2
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 0pt; MARGIN: 0pt; PADDING-LEFT: 0pt; PADDING-RIGHT: 0pt; COLOR: #25547a; FONT-SIZE: 16px; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; PADDING-TOP: 0pt">ACLU
Sues Mississippi School for Excluding Teenager Wearing Tuxedo
from Yearbook</H2><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">
<TABLE style="WIDTH: 170px; MARGIN-LEFT: 15px" border=0
cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=8 align=right>
<TBODY>
<TR>
<TD
style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: #cccccc 1px solid; BORDER-RIGHT: #cccccc 1px solid"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=AkP203EuKxo_g7uC9uXCNg.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 hspace=0 alt=""
src="https://secure2.convio.net/aclu/images/content/pagebuilder/36536.jpg"
width=170 height=170></A> <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 5px"><SPAN
style="FONT-FAMILY: arial,sans-serif; COLOR: #404040; FONT-SIZE: 12px">Take
action to help protect LGBT students like Ceara Sturgis
from harassment and discrimination. <A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=H8VIyVfa8DcIhqhU8e-zfQ.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Urge your Representative and
Senators to support the Student Non-Discrimination
Act.</STRONG></A> </SPAN></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>The ACLU
filed a lawsuit this week against a Mississippi high school
that excluded a female student's name and senior portrait from
the yearbook rather than publish a photo of her in a tuxedo.
The lawsuit charges that Ceara Sturgis was unfairly
discriminated against by the Wesson Attendance Center based on
her sex and unfair gender stereotypes. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Ceara was an honor student and a
member of several sports teams at Wesson, where she attended
school from kindergarten through her senior year. At home and
at school, she dresses in clothing that is traditionally
associated with boys and had previously not encountered any
problems from her peers or teachers. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">When she had her formal senior
portrait taken, she opted to wear a tuxedo, rather than a
drape that gives the appearance of wearing a dress or a
blouse. Because of her attire, the school refused to publish
her photo and name as part of the senior class. The lawsuit
charges Ceara's rights were violated under Title IX, which
prohibits discrimination based on sex and sex stereotypes, and
the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of equal protection.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">"This should never have been
an issue. Title IX and the Constitution prohibit school
officials from forcing students to conform to gender
stereotypes. Ceara should not have been expected to compromise
her everyday appearance and identity for her senior portrait,"
said Bear Atwood, interim Legal Director for the ACLU of
Mississippi. "The school's actions are discriminatory,
unlawful and mean-spirited." <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Take action to help
protect LGBT students from harassment and discrimination. <A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=V1HKgx0rBy_Y6g0522YsYw.."
target=_blank>Ask your members of Congress to support the
Student Non-Discrimination Act. </A></STRONG><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A href="#top">back to
top</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px"><!-- STORY 4 --><A
name=mstory4></A>
<H2
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 0pt; MARGIN: 0pt; PADDING-LEFT: 0pt; PADDING-RIGHT: 0pt; COLOR: #25547a; FONT-SIZE: 16px; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; PADDING-TOP: 0pt">A
Disturbing Vision for the Future </H2><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=Rs48jk1T3I4njFqgrByeFw.."
target=_blank><IMG border=0 alt="" align=right
src="https://secure2.convio.net/aclu/images/content/pagebuilder/35605.gif"></A>
The era that Net Neutrality supporters have long predicted is
here—major companies have begun divvying up the internet. Last
week, Google and Verizon announced a "policy framework" of how
the rules for the internet could work in the future. The
framework is a disturbing vision for the future. Wireless
internet—such as services delivered over smart phones—would be
completely unregulated; companies would be free to prioritize
their own services—for everything from music to video to
chat—over those of competitors. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Telecom providers could also do
whatever they want with managed services, like Verizon's FIOS,
that are offered directly to the companies but use the same
wires and bandwidth as the regular internet. Regulators under
this new framework would be neutered, reduced to policing a
narrow area of consumer complaints with no power over vast
swaths of the web. If these new rules are adopted, the regular
internet will quickly become a backwater. All the investment
and capital funding would go toward building up the managed
services and wireless networks where the companies would have
free reign to use their market power to make the most money.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">But none of this is
inevitable. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is
considering action this fall to regulate telecommunications
providers so that they have to provide full, fair service to
everyone with no discrimination or deals between companies.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Take
action: </STRONG><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=_o5DZWN5iaN5F5KY8Gnb-g.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Support the FCC's efforts to restore Net
Neutrality. </STRONG></A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A
href="#top">back to top</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><!-- STORY 5 --><A name=mstory5></A>
<H2
style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 0pt; MARGIN: 0pt; PADDING-LEFT: 0pt; PADDING-RIGHT: 0pt; COLOR: #25547a; FONT-SIZE: 16px; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; PADDING-TOP: 0pt">Kevin
Keith Clemency Request Rejected by Ohio Parole Board </H2><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Kevin Keith is a 46-year-old man
currently on death row in the state of Ohio. Keith is
scheduled to be put to death on September 15, despite
overwhelming evidence that he is an innocent man. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Following a 12-hour clemency hearing
last week, an Ohio parole board recommended that Governor
Strickland deny Keith's clemency request. However, the parole
board's recommendation to the governor is advisory and
nonbinding—and can ultimately either be affirmed or ignored by
the governor, who has done both during his tenure. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Keith's attorneys released a
statement this week responding to the parole board's
recommendation which states: “Brand new evidence—never heard
by a jury—shows that another man admitted he was paid to
commit the crime for which Mr. Keith stands to be executed.
And still other evidence shows Mr. Keith has a strong alibi
for the time of the crime, supported by four witnesses. These
circumstances do not present an absolute certainty of guilt.
<BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">"That is why prominent
individuals and nonpartisan organizations—including more than
30 former state and federal judges and prosecutors, the Ohio
Innocence Project, the National Innocence Network (comprised
of 61 innocence projects and legal organizations), more than
100 Ohio faith leaders and organizations, 13 leading
eyewitness and memory experts, law enforcement, death row
exonerees, and thousands of citizens across Ohio and the
U.S.—support clemency for Mr. Keith." <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px">Since the time of his arrest and
throughout his 16 years on death row, Keith has steadfastly
maintained his innocence. Gov. Strickland has the sole power
to grant clemency in the case. Keith's lawyers are urging him
to review the facts of the case on his own, without deferring
to courts that have not reviewed all the evidence. <BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><STRONG>>> Take action:
</STRONG><A
href="http://action.aclu.org/site/R?i=_PNiTf9Xy01ljg6-TyC5ZA.."
target=_blank><STRONG>Sign a letter to Gov. Strickland today,
asking him to prevent an irreversible sentence by granting
clemency to Kevin Keith. </STRONG></A><BR><BR
style="LINE-HEIGHT: 10px"><A href="#top">back to
top</A><BR><BR style="LINE-HEIGHT: 20px">
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Civil Liberties Union<BR>125 Broad Street, 18th Floor<BR>New
York, New York 10004-2400<BR>Geraldine Engel and Lisa
Sock,<BR>Editors</STRONG></SPAN><BR><BR></DIV></TD>
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</STYLE>
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