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News ACLU sues to uncover policy for notifying defendants of FISA surveillance
ACLU sues to uncover policy for notifying defendants of FISA surveillance
Neil Devlin
October 18, 2013 02:06:53 pm

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a Freedom of Information (FOIA) lawsuit Thursday in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York to compel the federal government...

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    Latest DISPATCHES
    Russia court sentences pro-war activist and Putin critic to six years in prison

    Russia court sentences pro-war activist and Putin critic to six years in prison

    Ghana dispatch: regional African court orders Ghana to respond to alleged human rights violations

    Ghana dispatch: regional African court orders Ghana to respond to alleged human rights violations

    Latest COMMENTARY
    Speaking as Suspicion: How Immigration Enforcement Chills Free Speech

    Speaking as Suspicion: How Immigration Enforcement Chills Free Speech

    by Lauren Gearty and Lawrence Friedman | New England Law
    After Radical Court Reform, Mexico’s Arbitration Protections Face First Major Test

    After Radical Court Reform, Mexico’s Arbitration Protections Face First Major Test

    by Arturo C. Porzecanski | American University
    Latest FEATURES
    Explainer: The judiciary corruption scandal rocking Romania

    Explainer: The judiciary corruption scandal rocking Romania

    One of the World’s Most Climate-Vulnerable Nations, One of the Least Prepared: Sri Lanka’s Deadly Choice

    One of the World’s Most Climate-Vulnerable Nations, One of the Least Prepared: Sri Lanka’s Deadly Choice

    THIS DAY @ LAW

    Thomas Becket, former Chancellor of England, murdered by Henry II's knights

    On December 29, 1170, Archbishop Thomas Becket, former Chancellor of England, was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral by knights acting in the name of Henry II.

    Becket and Henry had been entangled in a power struggle over, among other things, criminal jurisdiction over clergy. Read a contemporary account of the murder of Thomas Becket.

    Texas attains US statehood

    On December 29, 1845, Texas became the twenty-eighth state to join the United States of America when US President James K. Polk signed the Ordinance of Annexation. Texas had a complicated path to statehood because it had formerly been part of Mexico and then an independent republic. The US Congress passed the Annexation of the Republic of Texas Joint Resolution on March 1, 1845. Voters in Texas then approved the Ordinance of Annexation in October, before it was approved by the US Congress and signed into law by President Polk on this day in 1845. The US Supreme Court later ruled in Texas v. White that, despite its unique path to statehood, Texas did not have the right to secede from the union.

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