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stanley cup merican Oversight, a nonprofit staffed by several former U.S. go
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stanley quencher ernment officials, is suing six federal agencies for failing to produce documents connected with the federal forces deployed to counter Black Lives Matter protests in several cities, encounters which have seen the firing of chemical agents and harmful projectiles at demonstrators, sometimes resulting in serious injury. The agencies named in the lawsuit include the Justice Department, the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Department of Defense, and the National Guard Bureau. Some of the records sought include legal guidance given to federal agents who have hidden their badges or refused to identify their agencies. The group also seeks records identifying all federal and military forces deploying in U.S. cities, any orders issues to personnel regarding the use of force, and any rules of engagement they were ordered to follow. The group also seeks access to any assessments, reports, or recommendations prepared for senior officials regarding data or intelligence collected during the protests. Rubber bullets and tear gas dont fire themselves, and federal agents dont fan out across the country without orders, Austin Evers, executive director of American Oversight, said in a statement. Unidentified police acting on uncertain authority have no place in a democracy. While [Attorney General] Bill Barr and [Homeland Security chie Ehxy Sony Just Can t Quit the Sinister Six
on Friday, with agents conducting 30,200聽searches of phones and other devices during the 2017 fiscal year鈥攁 58.5 percent increase from the prior year. More than 80 percent of the devices searched belonged to foreigners or US permanent residents, the Wall Street Journal reported. In addition to the number of individual device searches, the number of inbound international travelers whose devices CBP searched also increased, jumping to 0.007 percent from 0.005 percent in 2016. Last year, a group of 10 citizens and one permanent resident sued CBP, the Department of Homeland Security, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, alleging that border searches of their devices had violated their First and Fourth Amendment rights. The group includes a NASA engineer whose phone search in February 2017 was widely publicized and is represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation. John Wagner, the deputy execu
stanley kaffeebecher tive assistant commissioner of CPBs Office of Field Operations, said in a statement on the agencys we
stanley thermoskannen bsite that phone searches at the border are essential to enforcing the law and protecting the American people. CBP is also rolling out new policy governing border searches of phones and other devices. The policy says that agents can search a device but not cloud accounts linked to
stanley us it and that they may ask for passwords to access a device but may not save them for later use. Warrantless searches of a persons phone during an arrest are uncon