Unpublished letter to pro-apartheid magazine claimed familiarity with “running an independent publication.” Read more about Neo-Nazi assassin of Jo Cox claimed "personal experience" of publishing
Thomas Mair’s first words in court were “death to traitors, freedom for Britain.” Read more about How Jo Cox's alleged assassin was influenced by neo-Nazism
There is a pattern: acts of spectacular violence, predominantly by white men, are rarely termed “terrorist” even when all the evidence points in that direction. Read more about Why isn’t the government calling the LAX shooting “terrorism?”
A pillar in Chicago’s Palestinian community faces jail time and deportation over a conviction by an Israeli military court more than four decades ago. Read more about Palestinian arrested in Chicago because of her community activism, groups say
Tenuous evidence used to smear Council on American-Islamic Relations. Read more about How the FBI blacklisted US' largest Muslim civil rights group
Nancy Murray, education director of the ACLU of Massachusetts, explains why she believes a “Muslim exception” is being carved out of the First Amendment, how a juror came to Tarek Mehanna’s sentencing hearing last week to ask the judge for mercy, and why Mehanna’s case has wide-reaching implications. Read more about "You will be punished if you don't become an informant": ACLU's Nancy Murray on Tarek Mehanna case
The US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN) is asking supporters to sign a pledge to defend civil and human rights as it was revealed last week that the lead government prosecutor of the Holy Land Five has been assigned to the ongoing secret investigation against anti-war and international solidarity activists across the US. Read more about US Palestinians organize as government renews threats to indict solidarity activists
A judged handed down lengthy prison sentences yesterday to three young US Muslims who were convicted of vague terrorism conspiracy charges. Read more about Decades-long sentences for young US Muslims convicted of vague terrorism conspiracy by "sleeping" jury
The case of Ziyad Yaghi and Omar Aly Hassan of North Carolina raises questions about the use of preemptive prosecution to get convictions in the vast majority of domestic terrorism cases. Read more about Young US Muslims face sentencing for material support conspiracy so vague, government can't even say what terrorists they intended to support