Will Guzzardi of the Huffington Post reports on a bill recently passed by the Illinois legislature which would allow DNA samples to be collected from individuals arrested of certain crimes, and compiled into a state registry:

Privacy groups, though, have expressed consternation at the idea of an expanded DNA database that could move the state and nation closer to genetic surveillance.

"A lot of the debate on this subject confuses this notion that DNA is just like a fingerprint," Ed Yohnka, Director of Communications and Public Policy at the ACLU of Illinois told HuffPost Chicago. "A fingerprint is just to identify someone. DNA contains your entire genetic information, sensitive information about health issues, not only for you but also for close family members."
...
Still, Ed Yohnka of the ACLU had his doubts. When asked if the proposed law was legal, he said, "We think it may not be.

"We think it raises serious questions about the explicit privacy protections that are contained in the Illinois Constitution," he added.

The Illinois Constitution does indeed contain more stringent privacy protections than federal law. The current state constitution was adopted in 1970, and because of its relative modernity, it was careful to carve out personal privacy more explicitly than others.

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Friday, May 27, 2011 - 2:37pm

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The Chicago Tribune reports that Catholic Charities of Rockford will end its foster-care and adoption services for fear it might be forced to quit discriminating against LGBT couples:

Benjamin Wolf, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois who represents juvenile state wards as part of a court-monitored consent decree with DCFS, said the decision was troubling, especially in Rockford where there is a high turnover of child welfare workers and racial and economic tensions.

... "I am very sorry that they would give a greater priority to their commitment to continue discriminating than the health and welfare of Illinois children."

Wolf said that when Catholic Charities in Chicago ended its foster care services in 2007 because the agency's insurer dropped its coverage, many caseworkers and foster care homes agreed to transfer to other agencies without disrupting the children's placements. He hopes families in the 11 counties served by Rockford Catholic Charities will be similarly amenable.

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Friday, May 27, 2011 - 2:18pm

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In February 2010, Lawrence Ho sought to return home to the United States after attending a conference in Canada. At the border crossing at Rainbow Bridge in New York, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers asked Mr. Ho, an American Muslim convert, "When did you become a Muslim?", "Which mosques do you attend?" and "How often do you attend the mosque?"

Last August, Hassan Shibly, a law student at the University at Buffalo Law School, sought to re-enter the United States at JFK airport with his wife and 7-month-old son after a trip abroad to visit family and perform a religious pilgrimage. Before they would let him come home, CBP officers asked him "Do you visit any Islamist extremist websites?"; "Are you part of any Islamic tribes?"; "Have you ever been to a madrassah or studied Islam full-time?"; "Do you attend a particular mosque?" "How many gods or prophets do you believe in?"

These stories, of ACLU clients, are not isolated tales. Over the past several years, at ports, land border crossings, and international airports across the country, U.S. citizens and lawful residents who are Muslim or who are perceived to be Muslim have been targeted by CBP officers for questioning about deeply personal beliefs, associations and religious practices protected by the First Amendment.

In December 2010, the ACLU and Muslim Advocates called for an investigation into this practice, and into the troubling experiences of five U.S. citizens, including Mr. Ho and Mr. Shibly, whom CBP officers subjected to invasive questioning. And last week, in response, we received a letter from the Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL) stating that it is opening an investigation into the problem and our clients’ complaints.

CRCL’s investigation is an important step in the right direction. Questioning individuals about their protected religious and political beliefs, associations, and religious practices (like charitable giving) may infringe upon rights guaranteed by the Constitution and federal law — rights that U.S. citizens do not surrender at the border.

CRCL’s investigation should be thorough and should answer the questions we raised in our December 2010 letter: Our clients — and all Americans — deserve a clarification of CBP policy on questioning about constitutionally protected religious and political beliefs and activities. They deserve to know how information they provide is handled, and whether it is shared with other government agencies. Our clients also deserve a clear statement that their civil rights and civil liberties were violated when they were questioned in this invasive manner without reasonable suspicion that they had done anything wrong.

A fair investigation should lead to a simple and clear message: CBP officers should not question U.S. citizens or legal residents about their constitutionally protected beliefs, associations, or activities without a reasonable suspicion based on credible evidence that the individual has engaged in criminal activity, and without a connection between such questions and the suspected activity. We’re hopeful that CRCL will reach the right result.

Think your rights were violated while traveling? Tell us your story.

(Originally posted on the Blog of Rights.)

Date

Friday, May 13, 2011 - 8:16pm

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