Court Dismissed Case Seeking to Hold U.S. Officials Accountable for Torturing American Citizen
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
NEW YORK – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit today affirmed the dismissal of the American Civil Liberties Union’s lawsuit against current and former government officials for their roles in the unlawful detention and torture of U.S. citizen José Padilla. The U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina ruled in February that an American citizen designated an "enemy combatant" by the executive branch and tortured by government officials could not bring suit to vindicate his constitutional rights.
“Today is a sad day for the rule of law and for those who believe that the courts should protect American citizens from torture by their own government,” said ACLU National Security Project Litigation Director Ben Wizner, who argued the appeal in court. “By dismissing this lawsuit, the appeals court handed the government a blank check to commit any abuse in the name of national security, even the brutal torture of a U.S. citizen on U.S. soil. This impunity is not only anathema to a democracy governed by laws, but contrary to history’s lesson that in times of fear our values are a strength, not a hindrance.”
More information and case documents are available at:
www.aclu.org/national-security/padilla-v-rumsfeld
Learn More About the Issues in This Press Release
Related Content
-
Press ReleaseJun 2026
Privacy & Technology
+2 Issues
In New Report, Aclu Warns Against Giving Private Companies Centralized Access To Police Data. Explore Press Release.In New Report, ACLU Warns Against Giving Private Companies Centralized Access to Police Data
WASHINGTON – The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) released a new report today about the increasingly central role that surveillance and tech companies are playing in US police departments and how that threatens to give private companies unfettered access to Americans’ sensitive data. The report examines the major companies involved, the potential ways this information could be abused or exploited, and the history of close ties between corporations and police. Every day, police across the country use body cameras, drones, dash cams, and fixed surveillance cameras gathering hours upon hours of footage of people going about their daily lives. And now, some of the biggest surveillance tech companies, including Axon, Flock, and Motorola, want to gather, analyze, and control this data by providing “operating systems” for police departments that, like operating systems on computers and phones, can see and control all the data in the system. This will threaten the civil rights and civil liberties of everyone who interacts with one of these cameras — knowingly or not. Part of this trend is the movement towards police cloud services, which facilitates the consolidation of data from thousands of U.S. police departments within corporate servers and gives these private actors live remote control over the surveillance tech even after it’s deployed in communities. Or as Axon puts it on their website, “integrating hardware devices and cloud software solutions” in “the Axon ecosystem” and connecting “every officer, responder and agency.” “Putting private, for-profit companies at the heart of modern police departments — what could go wrong? The answer is: plenty, and that’s what this paper outlines” said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project.“Policymakers, the public, and the policing profession need to grapple with the implications of this corporatization of police departments — especially for people’s civil rights and liberties — and address it before this becomes normalized and leads to new forms of abuse we’ve never seen before.” These new corporate efforts to expand their work with police are especially worrying given how quickly surveillance technology is proliferating across the country — and how few places have strong guardrails or oversight in place. As the report details, there are many ways providers could exploit their insider access to this data, including using it to go after critics, journalists, labor unions, regulators, and competitors, or to try and fend off investigations into their products. The lack of safeguards also means that company employees could use this data to target exes, manipulate prediction markets, or even alter evidence. Unfortunately, it’s not just the companies selling these products that the public needs to be worried about. According to the report, there is another set of players that raise many of the same concerns about private companies’ access to police data and the corporate role in policing: cloud computing platforms like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform, which currently also have access to the growing mountain of data generated by surveillance-based policing. The report lays out six recommendations that policymakers could implement to protect their constituents. Recommendations include contract requirements restricting private vendors’ access to law enforcement data, mandating the use of local rather than cloud services, and passing both the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act and Community Control Over Police Surveillance (CCOPS) laws. -
Press ReleaseJun 2026
National Security
Court Hears Arguments On Memo Legally Justifying Caribbean Boat Strikes. Explore Press Release.Court Hears Arguments on Memo Legally Justifying Caribbean Boat Strikes
NEW YORK — A United States District Court in the Southern District of New York heard arguments today in a lawsuit seeking the immediate release of an Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) opinion that the Trump administration is using to justify and govern its illegal campaign of lethal strikes on civilian boats in international waters. In today’s hearing, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), and the Center for Constitutional Rights argued that the Trump administration cannot keep its legal justification for the boat strikes campaign secret from the American people while repeatedly referencing it in public. The groups asked the presiding judge to order the release of the OLC opinion after personally reviewing it to ensure that the administration discloses all of the disclosable legal analysis to the public. Under the Freedom of Information Act, the government must by default disclose its records to the public. However, in court, the Trump administration took the radical position that the U.S. Constitution permits it to withhold from public view records protected by the presidential communications privilege — a privilege meant to protect advisory documents held closely to the president and his immediate staff — even if those records contain binding agency law or have been distributed to administration officials who play no role in presidential decision-making. The judge questioned the administration’s attorney about the limits and novelty of this expansive view of presidential privilege, which the government presented for the first time at oral argument, and asked him why the government has opted to keep its legal justification for the boat strikes campaign secret even after having made other similar types of legal memoranda public. During the hearing, the government’s attorney also acknowledged that there are parts of the memo’s legal analysis that could be isolated and released to the public without revealing classified information. “People across the country, politicians across the aisle, and the families of victims have been demanding answers as to how our government is justifying the cold-blooded murder of civilians,” said Jeffrey Stein, staff attorney with the ACLU’s National Security Project. “The Trump administration has murdered over 210 civilians with no sound legal or moral basis. At a minimum, the administration must disclose to the American people why it thinks this killing spree is lawful.” The groups are suing to force the disclosure of a legal opinion authored by OLC — a part of the Justice Department whose opinions are generally treated as binding within the executive branch — that supposedly validates the ongoing strikes as lawful acts in an alleged “armed conflict” with unspecified “drug cartels.” Reportedly, the memo also purports to immunize personnel who authorized or took part in these unlawful strikes from future criminal prosecution for what would otherwise simply be homicides. “The Trump administration is displacing the fundamental mandates of international law with the phony wartime rhetoric of a basic autocrat,” said Baher Azmy, legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights. “If the OLC opinion seeks to dress up the obvious illegality of these serial homicides in legalese in order to provide cover, the public needs to see this analysis and ultimately hold accountable all those who facilitate murder in the United States’ name.” Contrary to the government’s public assertions, the U.S. is not, and could not be, in an armed conflict with Latin American drug cartels. Under international law, an armed conflict between a state and a non-state actor exists only if the non-state actor is an “organized armed group” that is structured and disciplined like regular armed forces and is engaged in “protracted armed violence” against the state. There is no plausible argument that any drug cartel satisfies this test vis-a-vis the United States. “The public deserves to know how the Trump administration is rubber-stamping the killing of civilians in the Caribbean,” said Ify Chikezie, staff attorney at the New York Civil Liberties Union. “By claiming that these attacks are legal while refusing to provide any evidence or rationale, President Trump shows once again his disdain for basic transparency, human rights, and the rule of law. The court must step in and order the administration to release these documents immediately.” Since Sept. 2, the Trump administration’s lethal strikes on boats have murdered at least 200 civilians, in clear violation of domestic and international law. In addition to a lawsuit enforcing a FOIA request on the OLC memo, the ACLU and Center for Constitutional Rights have also filed a lawsuit on behalf of two families from Trinidad & Tobago who are seeking redress after a U.S. boat strike killed their loved ones, and held a hearing at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on how the problematic lethal-strike policy violates international law and is an unconstitutional claim of executive power. This press release is available online here and here. To learn more about the case: see here and here.Court Case: FOIA Case Seeking the Trump Administration’s Legal Justification for Deadly Boat Strikes -
Press ReleaseJun 2026
National Security
Court To Hear Arguments In Lawsuit Demanding Trump Admin Publicly Release Legal Rationale For Illegal Boat Strikes. Explore Press Release.Court to Hear Arguments in Lawsuit Demanding Trump Admin Publicly Release Legal Rationale for Illegal Boat Strikes
WHAT: On June 24, 2026, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Center for Constitutional Rights will argue before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in a Freedom of Information Act case related to the Trump administration’s ongoing illegal boat strikes in the Eastern Caribbean and Pacific Ocean. The groups are asking the court to order the Trump administration to immediately release a still-secret legal opinion authored by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) that administration officials have repeatedly invoked as the purported legal basis for its ongoing lethal strikes campaign, which has killed over 200 civilians. Judge Paul A. Engelmayer has ordered the parties to discuss at the hearing whether he should personally review the OLC legal opinion in his chambers to inform his decision. WHO: Jeffrey Stein, staff attorney with the ACLU’s National Security Project WHEN: June 24, 2026, at 11:00 a.m. WHERE: Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse, Courtroom 1305 (40 Foley Square, New York, NY 10007) Press are welcome to attend in person. ACLU and Center for Constitutional Rights spokespeople will be available for interviews after the argument. If you have questions, please reach out to Allegra Harpootlian (aharpootlian@aclu.org) and Jen Nessel (press@ccrjustice.org) BACKGROUND: Since Sept. 2, 2025, the Trump administration has conducted at least 64 strikes on civilian boats in the Caribbean, murdering at least 210 civilians, in clear violation of domestic and international law. In October 2025, ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, and the New York Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit to enforce their Freedom of Information Act request seeking immediate disclosure of the OLC opinion that not only provides the legal reasoning and governing parameters for the strikes but reportedly purports to immunize personnel who authorized or took part in these unlawful strikes from future criminal prosecution. The Trump administration has repeatedly acknowledged the existence of this memo but has refused to subject it to public scrutiny. The ACLU, ACLU of Massachusetts, and the Center for Constitutional Rights are also representing two Trinidadian families, who are suing after the Trump administration killed their loved ones in October of last year. The men — Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo — were headed home after working as farm hands in Venezuela when the U.S. bombed their boat, killing them and four other people.Court Case: FOIA Case Seeking the Trump Administration’s Legal Justification for Deadly Boat StrikesAffiliate: New York -
News & CommentaryJun 2026
Privacy & Technology
National Security
The Downsides Of "deterrence". Explore News & Commentary.The Downsides of "Deterrence"
Surveillance Boosters Tout the Benefits of Deterrence, But There’s a Big Problem With ThatBy: Jay Stanley