Bio
Jameel Jaffer () is a former deputy legal director of the ACLU and former director of its Center for Democracy, which houses the organization's work on human rights, national security, free speech, privacy, and technology. He has litigated many cases relating to government surveillance, including challenges to the Patriot Act's "national security letter" provision, the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program, and the National Security Agency's call-tracking program. He has also litigated cases relating to targeted killing and torture, including a landmark case under the Freedom of Information Act that resulted in the release of the Bush administration's "torture memos" and hundreds of other documents relating to the Bush administration's torture program. He is currently working on a book about individual privacy and official secrecy, a project he began as an Open Society Fellow in 2013. Before joining the staff of the ACLU, he clerked for Judge Amalya L. Kearse of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, and Rt. Hon. Beverley McLachlin, Chief Justice of Canada. He is a graduate of Williams College, Cambridge University, and Harvard Law School.
Featured work
May 15, 2014
Calling Abroad? Then Your Privacy Rights May Be "Eliminated"
Mar 25, 2014
Obama's NSA Proposal Reveals a Broken Oversight System
Nov 8, 2013
The Basis for the NSA's Call-Tracking Program Has Disappeared, If It Ever Existed
Aug 16, 2013
"There Have Been Some Compliance Incidents": NSA Violates Surveillance Rules Multiple Times a Day
Aug 1, 2013
How to Decode the True Meaning of What NSA Officials Say