A congressional committee hearing is being held today on the Homeland Security Department’s (DHS) monitoring of social media. The meeting, being convened by the House Subcommittee of Counterterrorism and Intelligence, chaired by Rep. Patrick Meehan (R-PA), is being held as a result of documents on DHS monitoring that were exposed through a Freedom of Information Act request by the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public research center that focuses attention on emerging issues of privacy and other civil liberties issues.
Live Blog: Homeland Security Committee Hearing on DHS Monitoring of Social Media |
| By: Kevin Gosztola Thursday February 16, 2012 7:00 am |
Guantánamo: Ten Years Too Many |
| By: Center for Constitutional Rights Friday January 6, 2012 4:52 pm |
Estimates of detainees who were never terrorists range from 70 to 90 percent. Not one of the more than 700 who enjoyed the hospitality of Gitmo has been able to collect compensation for being held, often in solitary confinement and some for as long as ten years, before being released without ever being charged.
Liveblogging Lieberman’s Hearing on Homeland Security Since 9/11 |
| By: Kevin Gosztola Wednesday September 7, 2011 7:07 am |
The Senate Homeland Security Committee, chaired by Senator Joe Lieberman (I-CT), is holding a hearing on successes and challenges the Department of Homeland Security has faced and now faces. The hearing is one of a number of hearings being held on Capitol Hill in the coming days to mark the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.
Flood of Rumors along the Missouri River |
| By: Peterr Saturday June 18, 2011 9:00 am |
The flood of waters continues, but as usual during a natural disaster, the flood of rumors is rolling right along with it. Mythical levee breaches compete with imaginary government policy decisions, all of which combine to try to drive those who are dealing with the actual flooding bonkers.
And don’t even get me started about a Fukushima-style disaster in Nebraska . . . Get a link, people — and it ought to be from someone closer to Nebraska than Hawaii.
Rumors flow faster than the water during a disaster like this. The folks who are working on protecting homes, businesses, and communities have enough to do without having to beat back rumors — but this, too, is part of dealing with a disaster.
FBI Documents Show US Citizens Targeted for Interest in US Foreign Policy |
| By: Kevin Gosztola Thursday May 19, 2011 3:05 pm |
Antiwar and international solidarity activists, subjects of a federal grand jury investigation that alleges they may have provided “material support for terrorism,” uncovered documents on FBI guidelines and investigation practices left behind in an activist’s home that was raided in September of last year. The documents illuminate how the FBI has conducted surveillance of the activists being targeted in the investigation and further prove the grand jury is being used as a tool to go after political groups.
DHS’s Top Cybersecurity Officer Resigns |
| By: emptywheel Wednesday May 18, 2011 2:30 pm |
The top cybersecurity guy at DHS, Phil Reitinger, announced his resignation today. Which is pretty odd, given that Obama just rolled out his cybersecurity strategy a few days ago.
Peter King Needs to Be Object Lesson in Our Failed Counter-Terrorism Approach |
| By: emptywheel Wednesday March 9, 2011 12:20 pm |
It is downright inappropriate to have an unapologetic terrorist sympathizer head our Committee on Homeland Security. So long as King maintains his terrorist support was justifiable but that of brown people is somehow different, he stands as a symbol of US hypocrisy on terrorism.
Did UK Keep Brennan, Napolitano Out of Loop Before Terror Arrests? |
| By: emptywheel Tuesday December 28, 2010 12:50 pm |
The more likely possibility, given what Brennan, Napolitano, and Clapper have said is that the US–the entire government–was left out of the loop on this investigation. That’s certainly Britain’s prerogative. You never know when some Dick Cheney figure is going to sabotage a British investigation on them, after all.
TSA’s Legal Justification for Gate Grope |
| By: emptywheel Monday December 27, 2010 7:00 am |
The Electronic Privacy Information Center has been suing the Department of Homeland Security because it refused to engage in the public rule-making process before it adopted RapeAScan machines as part of the primary screening at airports. DHS responded to EPIC’s suit the other day. While I think their response will be largely successful as written, [...]
Rape Victim Arrested by TSA for Refusing Groping |
| By: Michael Whitney Friday December 24, 2010 2:00 pm |
A 59-year-old rape survivor with a pacemaker refused a groping by TSA agents at Austin Bergstrom airport, and was subsequently arrested, pushed to the floor, dragged, and banned from flying from the airport. While the TSA’s pornoscanners weren’t involved in this incident, it shows the newfound prevalence of TSA’s aggressive new groping strategy for anyone who doesn’t clear the first round of security checks.
Know your rights this travel season - download our “Know Your Rights” flier, and visit our TSA coverage page for more on pornoscanners and groping.


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