The government appears to be up to its old tricks again. As Mozilla General Counsel Harvey Anderson , the Department of Homeland Security recently requested that Mozilla take down a Firefox add-on that helps users access information on the Internet. DHS apparently told Mozilla that the MafiaaFire add-on at issue circumvents a court order entitling DHS to seize certain domain names in an attempt to prevent individuals from accessing websites allegedly engaged in copyright infringement.
Leaving aside the issue of whether DHS can constitutionally seize websites through court proceedings without first providing due process rights to the websites, whether speech is unlawful is for the courts to determine, not for DHS or any government entity to decide. The U.S. government should not be in the business of trying to get speech removed from the Internet absent valid court orders declaring that speech to be unlawful. After all, online content, like all speech, is protected by the First Amendment.
This is not the first time that government entities have tried to get speech removed from the Internet without first obtaining a court order. It unfortunately won't be the last time either. Mozilla did the right thing, and it should be applauded. Instead of blindly doing what DHS requested, Mozilla asked the government reasonable to determine if there was really a lawful basis for taking down the speech, and it let the public know that it received this request. in response to a government demand for information about its users. Will the services you use do the same?
It's time for all ISPs and other online service providers to commit to protecting user rights and to be transparent about government demands. that you expect them to stand up for your rights and be transparent about government demands. A free and open Internet depends on them.
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Press ReleaseJul 2025
Free Speech
Immigrants' Rights
Georgetown Scholar to Remain Free After Appeals Court Rejects Trump Admin Bid to Re-Detain Him
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals today rejected the Trump administrations request for a stay of a lower courts decision to release Dr. Badar Khan Suri from detention on bail. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested him on March 17th in retaliation for constitutionally protected speech and association, and he spent eight weeks in detention, mostly in Texas. Upon his release in May, he returned home to his wife and three children in Virginia, where his lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of his arrest is proceeding. I am grateful for my freedom and for the time I have to spend with my family. I have faith that the American judiciary will protect my constitutional rights, said Dr. Badar Khan Suri. The Trump administration both appealed the ruling and sought a stay, which, if granted, would have allowed ICE to re-detain Dr. Khan Suri. With this decision, he will now remain free pending the Fourth Circuits consideration of the appeal. The governments opening brief is due on July 14. The Trump administration is trying to silence speech it doesnt agree with by targeting people like Dr. Khan Suri and Mahmoud Khalil, but ideas are not illegal, said Mary Bauer, executive director of the 勛圖眻畦 of Virginia. Americans dont want to live in a country where the federal government disappears people whose views it doesnt like. The First Amendment protects all of us regardless of citizenship from being punished by the government for our political speech. Dr. Khan Suri, an Indian national, is a visa holder whose wife and children are U.S. citizens. Prior to his arrest, Dr. Khan Suri and his wife, who is Palestinian American, were doxxed by groups that target advocates for Palestinian rights. Agents abducted Dr. Khan Suri outside his home because of his speech in support of Palestinian rights and his family ties to Gaza, then secretly transported him 1,500 miles away from his family and his attorneys, moving him between five different ICE facilities in three states in four days. The Fourth Circuit has prevented the government from re-detaining Dr. Khan Suri, recognizing what is at stake here: Dr. Khan Suris right to stand in solidarity with Palestinians, his continued freedom from punitive and retaliatory incarceration, and his freedom to be with his family and community, said Astha Sharma Pokharel, staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. He is challenging his arrest and detention under the First Amendment, the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and the Administrative Procedure Act. Separately, his immigration case, in which the Trump administration is seeking to deport him, is now also proceeding in Virginia. The appeals court has rightly denied the governments desperate and cruel attempt to re-detain Dr. Khan Suri over a thousand miles away from his family and community, said Scarlet Kim, senior staff attorney with the 勛圖眻畦s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. We will continue to work to vindicate Dr. Khan Suris First Amendment rights so that others do not have to fear imprisonment for speaking out about issues that matter to them." Todays ruling adds to a string of losses for the Trump administration in cases in which it has arrested immigrant students and academics for criticizing U.S. support of Israels assault on Gaza. In recent weeks, federal district courts have ordered Dr. Khan Suri, Tufts Ph.D student R羹meysa zt羹rk, and Columbia students Mohsen Mahdawi and Mahmoud Khalil released from detention. Dr. Khan Suri is represented in his federal lawsuit by the 勛圖眻畦 of Virginia, the 勛圖眻畦, the Center for Constitutional Rights, the HMA Law Firm, and the Immigrants and Non-Citizens Rights Clinic at the CUNY School of Law.Court Case: Suri v. TrumpAffiliate: Virginia -
Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Arts Groups Argue Gender Ideology Still Unconstitutionally Penalized by National Endowment for the Arts
PROVIDENCE, R.I. Four arts organizations filed a motion for summary judgment today, arguing that the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is violating the First Amendment, Fifth Amendment, and Administrative Procedure Act in its implementation of an executive order that prohibits federal funding for gender ideology. If the motion is granted, the suit could be resolved without trial. The motion comes after the NEA admitted that it would judge projects based on whether they promote what the government deems to be gender ideology and after it reinstated a requirement that grant applicants agree to abide by all executive orders when applying. Theatre is one of our most powerful reflections of humanitya space where truth-tellers and artists hold up a mirror to our lives, our struggles, and our joys, said LaTeshia Ellerson, co-executive director of national engagement at Theatre Communications Group. On stage, we see ourselves through the eyes of artists who dare to reveal the deepest parts of who we are. The First Amendment protects this essential freedom to create without fear of censorship or discrimination. As we join our co-plaintiffs in filing this motion, we urge the court to affirm what is both constitutionally and morally clear: all artists and storytellers have the right to be heard. The suit was first filed in March after the NEA began requiring applicants to attest that they would not promote gender ideology in order to be eligible for funding and blocked any projects that appeared to promote gender ideology from getting an award. In April, the court held that the NEAs decision to make any project that promotes what the government calls gender ideology ineligible for funds likely violated the First Amendment and exceeded its statutory authority. The First Amendment protects our right to artistic freedom, said Adam Odsess-Rubin, founding artistic director at National Queer Theater. Queer art is American art, and censorship is un-American. We will continue to fight for our constitutionally protected freedom of speech. In response to the litigation, the NEA paused the gender ideology-specific certification requirement. More recently, however, it reinstated the requirement that applicants comply with all executive orders. The NEA has admitted that it is screening art projects for gender ideology, said Vera Eidelman, senior staff attorney with the 勛圖眻畦s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. This is a clear-cut violation of the First Amendment. By judging projects based on whether they fit the governments worldview, the NEA is abandoning its statutory role to fund works based on excellence and merit, as well as violating the free expression rights of artists across the country. We know that the NEA is not upholding the protections guaranteed by the First Amendment, said Steven Brown, executive director of the 勛圖眻畦 of Rhode Island. If Rhode Island Latino Arts grant application, and all the plaintiffs applications, are denied funding because of ideology, then this would be a major step backward in our collective right to freedom of speech. We are hopeful the court will not accept the NEAs troubling arguments. The 勛圖眻畦, the 勛圖眻畦 of Rhode Island, David Cole, and Lynette Labinger, cooperating counsel for the 勛圖眻畦-RI, filed the motion for summary judgment in the U.S. District Court of Rhode Island on behalf of Rhode Island Latino Arts; National Queer Theater; The Theater Offensive; and the Theatre Communications Group. The motion can be viewed here.Affiliate: Rhode Island -
Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Privacy & Technology
勛圖眻畦 Comment on Supreme Court Decision in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
WASHINGTON The Supreme Court issued a blow to freedom of speech and privacy today by upholding Texas legislation that requires invasive age verification to access online content. Todays ruling conflicts with decades of Supreme Court precedent protecting the free speech rights of adults to access sexual content online. But it is also a limited opinion that does not permit age verification for non-sexual content online. The Supreme Court has departed from decades of settled precedents that ensured that sweeping laws purportedly for the benefit of minors do not limit adults access to First Amendment-protected materials, said Cecillia Wang, national legal director of the 勛圖眻畦. The Texas statute at issue shows why those precedents applying strict scrutiny were needed. The legislature claims to be protecting children from sexually explicit materials, but the law will do little to block their access, and instead deters adults from viewing vast amounts of First Amendment-protected content. Texass H.B. 1181 mandates that any website where one-third or more of its content is deemed sexual in a way that is harmful to minors must require visitors to prove they are adults before accessing the site. The act defines sexual material harmful to minors as material that is obscene from the perspective of an average person considering the materials effect on minors. Today's decision does not mean that age verification can be lawfully imposed across the internet, said Vera Eidelman, senior staff attorney with the 勛圖眻畦 Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. With this decision, the court has carved out an unprincipled pornography exception to the First Amendment. The Constitution should protect adults rights to access information about sex online, even if the government thinks it is too inappropriate for children to see." The Supreme Court reversed the Fifth Circuits ruling that mere rational basis scrutiny applies, instead imposing intermediate scrutiny, but it affirmed the Fifth Circuit Courts ultimate conclusion that the law survives and refused to apply strict scrutiny, as challenges to content-based laws typically do. However, the Texas law burdens adults ability to access sexual materials, requiring individuals to disclose personal information vulnerable to surveillance and data breaches just to access online content. The law also ultimately fails to achieve its intended purpose. Because the law only applies if one-third of a sites content is explicit, the online sites where minors are most likely to be exposed to sexual content, like forums or social media platforms, are not affected. As it has been throughout history, pornography is once again the canary in the coal mine of free expression, said Alison Boden, executive director of the Free Speech Coalition. The government should not have the right to demand that we sacrifice our privacy and security to use the internet. This law has failed to keep minors away from sexual content yet continues to have a massive chilling effect on adults. The outcome is disastrous for Texans and for anyone who cares about freedom of speech and privacy online. The Supreme Court repeatedly heard cases on this issue in the past, many of which were brought by the 勛圖眻畦, and had consistently held that requiring users to verify their age to access protected content is unconstitutional where there are less restrictive alternatives available, like filtering software. The Free Speech Coalition is represented by Quinn Emanuel, the 勛圖眻畦, and the 勛圖眻畦 of Texas. This case is a part of the 勛圖眻畦s Joan and Irwin Jacobs Supreme Court Docket. The decision can be read here.Court Case: Free Speech Coalition, Inc. v. PaxtonAffiliate: Texas -
News & CommentaryJun 2025
Free Speech
+3 Issues
Live Coverage: Final SCOTUS Decision Day
The 勛圖眻畦 has served as counsel or filed amicus briefs in more than half of the cases that the Supreme Court will decide today.By: 勛圖眻畦