Latest fromAmerican Civil Liberties Union
Trump's wall: Political, legal hits continue
The US President's move has already been hit with several lawsuits.
White House takes no blame for death of 7yo migrant girl
White House spokesman: "Disincentivise" migrants from making long treks to U.S. border.
In horrifying detail, women accuse US customs officers of invasive body searches
Lawsuits raise unsettling questions about US border force's considerable power.
Inside the FBI: Anger, worry, work
The bureau has repeatedly come under fire for abuses of power, privacy and civil rights.
Drawings expose CIA's torture regime
Drawings provide shocking new insight into the torture the CIA inflicted on suspects.
Chelsea Manning leaves prison
The US Army soldier who passed sensitive government documents to Wikileaks is free.
Facebook cuts ties with police monitoring
The move comes in the wake of concerns over law enforcement's tracking of protesters in Ferguson.
White House bars news outlets
The White House on Friday barred news outlets - including CNN, the New York Times and Los Angeles Times - from attending a press briefing.
Trump: 'Courts seem to be so political'
President Donald Trump denounced arguments against his immigration order as "disgraceful".
Supreme Court stops 'boobies' bracelet ban
The US Supreme Court has rejected an appeal from a school that suspended two students because they refused to remove bracelets promoting breast cancer awareness.
UFO-chasing hacker: Nasa security 'truly shocking'
Accused of "the biggest military hack of all time" Gary McKinnon is, according to the US, the most dangerous hacker in the world.
Hunger striker to be force-fed, rules US court
A British man who has been on hunger strike in a US prison since September 2007 can legally be force-fed by prison authorities, a court has ruled.
Does online tech pose an unacceptable threat to our privacy?
Some believe social networking and search - Facebook, Twitter and Google in particular - are putting our personal information at far too much risk.
CIA use drills, guns to interrogate
Handguns, electric drills and mock executions were used by the CIA to elicit information from terrorist suspects, reports surface.
Lunch prayer principal could face jail
A principal and an athletic director in Florida could be charged and spend six months in jail after they prayed before a meal at a school event.