Ƶ lawyers met with the press who cover the Supreme Court in Washington D.C. recently to provide an overview of important cases during the 2009-10 term of the high court.
Watch Ƶ Legal Director Steven R. Shapiro discuss United States v. Stevens, a case with broad First Amendment concerns.
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Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney with the Ƶ of Southern California, discusses Salazar v. Buono, a case in which the government is challenging a lower court ruling that a congressional statute transferring a small parcel of land under a cross in the Mojave Desert National Preserve to a private owner failed to resolve a violation of the Establishment Clause.
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Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Privacy & Technology
Ƶ 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. Today’s 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 Ƶ. “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.” Texas’s 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 material’s 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 Ƶ 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 Circuit’s ruling that mere rational basis scrutiny applies, instead imposing intermediate scrutiny, but it affirmed the Fifth Circuit Court’s 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 site’s 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 Ƶ, 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 Ƶ, and the Ƶ of Texas. This case is a part of the Ƶ’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 Ƶ has served as counsel or filed amicus briefs in more than half of the cases that the Supreme Court will decide today.By: Ƶ -
Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Ƶ Urges Court to Block Unconstitutional Order Targeting NPR and PBS
WASHINGTON — Today, the Ƶ, the Ƶ of the District of Columbia (Ƶ-DC), the Ƶ of Colorado (Ƶ-CO), and the Ƶ of Minnesota (Ƶ-MN) filed amicus briefs urging the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to block the enforcement of President Trump’s recent executive order defunding National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). The order, titled “Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Biased Media,” directs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and federal agencies to terminate all direct and indirect funding to NPR and PBS in explicit retaliation for the broadcasting organizations’ editorial and journalistic choices, which the order characterizes as “biased” and “partisan.” NPR and PBS each filed lawsuits challenging the executive order, National Public Radio, Inc. v. Trump and Public Broadcasting Service v. Trump. The amicus briefs support the outlets’ respective motions for summary judgment in those cases, arguing that the executive order constitutes a flagrant violation of the First Amendment because it retaliates against both speakers solely for their constitutionally protected speech, including the words they choose to use in coverage and what stories they choose to highlight. The briefs also argue that the order unconstitutionally restricts federal funding, including funds appropriated for local public broadcasters throughout the country to use as they see fit, based on President Trump’s disapproval of NPR’s and PBS’ news coverage. “We don’t have a Ministry of Propaganda in the United States,” said Brian Hauss, senior staff attorney with the Ƶ’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “The First Amendment prohibits President Trump from withholding federal funds expressly appropriated to support the free and independent press as punishment for news coverage he hates.” The executive order accuses NPR and PBS of “biased and partisan news coverage” and mandates punitive measures, including barring their receipt of any federal funds, prohibiting local public broadcasters from using any federal funds they receive to license NPR or PBS programming, and threatening to defund local public broadcasters who continue to associate with the outlets. The order’s accompanying fact sheet and press release further attack NPR’s and PBS’ editorial decisions on public health, transgender rights, and political investigations — reinforcing that the order is fundamentally rooted in viewpoint discriminatory animus against the outlets. The brief emphasizes that while the government may allocate funds to promote its own speech, it cannot penalize independent media outlets for expressing disfavored views, including by denying them access to subsidies appropriated by Congress to support independent, noncommercial programming on radio and television. NPR’s programming — including its flagship show “All Things Considered,” the most listened-to afternoon drive-time news radio program in the country — is speech on matters of public concern lying at the heart of the First Amendment. Likewise, the public affairs programming produced and distributed by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) — including PBS NewsHour, which has a nightly audience of 2.1 million viewers — serves as a vital platform for public debate. In addition to punishing the outlets for their constitutionally protected speech, the order threatens the financial stability of local broadcasters who rely on federal funds to license the outlets’ programming. It also deprives local communities throughout the country of access to beloved, noncommercial sources of information about public affairs, educational programming for children, artistic expression, and cultural commentary. “Just as the government cannot shut down a newspaper because it dislikes its editorials, it may not defund NPR and PBS because it disapproves of their reporting,” said Arthur Spitzer, senior counsel at the Ƶ of the District of Columbia. “Retaliating against journalists for doing their job is the antithesis of democracy and a clear violation of the freedom of press.” “NPR, Colorado Public Radio, and other public radio stations help ensure that communities across the country are informed and can engage in civic life,” said Tim Macdonald, legal director at the Ƶ of Colorado. “Punishing public media because the government does not like their reporting is characteristic of autocracies seeking to deprive communities of information, not democracies.” “Simply put, this executive order is a violation of the First Amendment,” said Ƶ-MN legal director Teresa Nelson. “President Trump is free to voice his disagreements with PBS, NPR, and any other media outlet’s programing, but he cannot use the power of the presidency to arbitrarily defund media organizations he dislikes.” The amicus briefs warn that the executive order threatens the editorial independence of local public broadcasters nationwide, undermines the congressionally mandated purpose of the Public Broadcasting Act, and endangers essential infrastructure like the Public Radio Satellite System, which reaches 99 percent of the U.S. population and plays a critical role in national emergency communications. You can find the briefs online here and here.Affiliates: Colorado, Minnesota, Washington, D.C. -
Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Immigrants' Rights
Mahmoud Khalil to Be Freed From Detention, Reunite With Wife and Son as Case Proceeds
NEWARK, N.J. – A federal court today granted bail to Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate student and lawful permanent resident targeted for deportation by the Trump administration because of his Palestinian rights advocacy. He will be able to return to New York to be with his wife and newborn son while his case proceeds. “After more than three months we can finally breathe a sigh of relief and know that Mahmoud is on his way home to me and Deen, who never should have been separated from his father,” said Dr. Noor Abdalla, Mahmoud Khalil’s wife. “We know this ruling does not begin to address the injustices the Trump administration has brought upon our family, and so many others the government is trying to silence for speaking out against Israel’s ongoing genocide against Palestinians. But today we are celebrating Mahmoud coming back to New York to be reunited with our little family, and the community that has supported us since the day he was unjustly taken for speaking out for Palestinian freedom.” Last Friday, the government informed the court it would continue to detain Mr. Khalil in a remote ICE detention facility in Jena, Louisiana, over false allegations related to supposed omissions on his green card application. The government’s new reliance on the “misrepresentation” allegations comes after the judge ruled the government could not keep detaining him on the grounds that his speech had adverse foreign policy consequences. Since being detained on March 8, Mr. Khalil has missed the birth of his first child, their family’s first Mother’s Day and Father’s Day, and his graduation from Columbia. “No one should fear being jailed for speaking out in this country,” said Alina Das, co-director of the Immigrant Rights Clinic at New York University School of Law, who argued before the court today. “We are overjoyed that Mr. Khalil will finally be reunited with his family while we continue to fight his case in court.” “This is a joyous day for Mahmoud, for his family, and for everyone’s First Amendment rights,” said Noor Zafar, senior staff attorney with Ƶ. “Since he was arrested in early March, the government has acted at every turn to punish Mahmoud for expressing his political beliefs about Palestine. But today’s ruling underscores a vital First Amendment principle: The government cannot abuse immigration law to punish speech it disfavors.” “It is an enormous relief that Palestinian human rights defender Mahmoud Khalil can return to New York while his case proceeds. Now, Mr. Khalil will thankfully be reunited with his wife and newborn — a bond that never should have been broken in the first place,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director at the NYCLU. “Ideas are not illegal, and no administration should ever incarcerate people for expressing opinions they disagree with. We are heartened and relieved that Mr. Khalil can return to his family, community, and counsel, and the NYCLU will continue to fight back against Trump’s unconstitutional attacks on free speech and dissent.” “We are relieved that Mr. Khalil can finally return to his family and community,” said Amol Sinha, executive director of the Ƶ of New Jersey. “This is an important step in vindicating Mr. Khalil’s rights as he continues to be unlawfully targeted by the federal government for his advocacy in support of Palestinian rights. We’re confident he will ultimately prevail in the fight for his freedom.” “We are so relieved Mahmoud is finally out of his cruel, remote detention, but equally outraged that it took this long and that Mahmoud had to fight this hard to challenge such outrageous and unconstitutional government conduct,” said Baher Azmy, legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights. “All Americans should be grateful that Mahmoud had the fortitude to defend basic first amendment principles – and his pursuit of justice for Palestinians – against the administration's autocratic tactics, which threaten us all.” “By ordering Mr. Khalil freed today, the court vindicates not only his rights but also recognized what has been plain to everyone, the government has detained Mr. Khalil to punish him for his speech in defense of Palestinians. We look forward to Mr. Khalil returning to his wife and son, as we pursue this fight in federal and immigration court for as long as it takes until justice is served,” said Ramzi Kassem, professor of law at the City University of New York and Co-Director of CLEAR, a legal non-profit and clinic. Mahmoud Khalil’s legal team has submitted multiple briefs and expert statements, and letters of support to the New Jersey court, outlining the irreparable harm he and others will continue to suffer as long as he remains illegally detained in Louisiana, thousands of miles away from his family. In addition, Mr. Khalil submitted his own declaration, factually disproving the government’s allegations and highlighting the fact that the government abandoned reliance on the so-called “misrepresentation” allegations in closing arguments in immigration court. The motion for release further explains that the court previously recognized that continued detention, based solely on the sorts of misrepresentations alleged by the government, is exceedingly rare and, the motion argued, is clearly only in further retaliation for his speech on Palestine. Mr. Khalil is represented by Dratel & Lewis, the Center for Constitutional Rights, CLEAR, Van Der Hout LLP, Washington Square Legal Services, the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), the Ƶ (Ƶ), the Ƶ of New Jersey, and the Ƶ of Louisiana. For more information on the case, please see here.Court Case: Khalil v. TrumpAffiliates: New Jersey, New York