AltWeeklies Wire

The Homeless, Now Out of Sightnew

A camp set up by the homeless at the Springfield, Ill., public library gets the boot.
Illinois Times  |  R.L. Nave  |  06-08-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Sit-Lie Law Gets Stallednew

Mayor of Portland reneges on promise to make more bathrooms available to homeless people before banning them from sitting or lying on the sidewalk -- City Council challenges enforcement of the law.
The Portland Mercury  |  Matt Davis  |  06-07-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Fighting for Your Right to Trademark Dirty Wordsnew

When Cybernet tried to trademark "fuckingmachines" (as in fuckingmachines.com), its request was denied because the patent office believes the word "fuck" is "scandalous" -- now the company is fighting the ruling in court, saying it is unconstitutional.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jeffrey C. Billman  |  06-07-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Redefining Terrornew

Federal judge rules environmental "monkeywrenchers" can be sentenced as "terrorists."
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Dean Kuipers  |  06-01-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Enemy of the State, That's Me!new

Republicans, terrorism, and how I joined Jay-Z and Alicia Keys as threats to national security.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Ted Rall  |  05-24-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Fascist Friesnew

Take a picture of the french fries on the Bridgeport ferry, and you might as well just admit that you're a charter member of Al Qaeda.
Fairfield County Weekly  |  Tom Gogola  |  05-23-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Maine Inmate Sues Prison Officials in Federal Courtnew

The case could be important in preserving the media's access to prisons and inmates.
Portland Phoenix  |  Lance Tapley  |  05-18-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Cop Wins $3 Million in Wiretap Casenew

A Pasadena police officer was awarded a $3 million judgment against the city of and its police department for violations of privacy stemming from the use of wiretaps against her.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Andre Coleman  |  05-14-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Real Judicial Activismnew

If ever there was a time, it's now; if ever there were a place it is Guantanamo Bay, where detainees have been held indefinitely without clearly defined procedures for determining their guilt or innocence of charges that are shadowy and ill-defined -- a situation that makes a joke of the rule of law.
Boston Phoenix  |  Harvey Silverglate  |  05-10-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Sleepwalking into a Surveillance Statenew

Government and corporate threats to online privacy are the topics of a major Montreal conference.
Montreal Mirror  |  Patrick Lejtenyi  |  04-26-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Texas is Amassing an Unprecedented Amount of Citizen Informationnew

Piece by piece, Gov. Rick Perry's homeland security office is gathering massive amounts of information about Texas residents and merging it to create the most exhaustive centralized database in state history, with no real oversight.
The Texas Observer  |  Jake Bernstein  |  04-24-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Free Speech Cut Downnew

A full report on the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression's 2007 Muzzle Awards.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Will Goldsmith  |  04-11-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Lt. Cmdr. John Sharpe's Words May Be Offensivenew

But should they be grounds for dismissal from the Navy?
Port Folio Weekly  |  Jennifer C. O'Donnell  |  04-04-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Jim Torgeson Fights for the Right to Twirl Signsnew

Unfortunately for Torgeson, holding a sign on a street corner in Scottsdale is a crime. So the small-business owner has taken his cause to the Arizona Legislature and is prepared take it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Phoenix New Times  |  Megan Irwin  |  04-02-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Whose E-mail Is It, Anyway?new

Recent cases -- William Beebe, Dena Bowers and now the firing of U.S. attorneys -- highlight the troubling, often murky issues around e-mail and privacy.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Jayson Whitehead  |  03-29-2007  |  Civil Liberties

Narrow Search

Category

Hot Topics

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range