Bio
Brett Max Kaufman is a senior staff attorney in the ACLU’s Center for Democracy working on a variety of issues related to national security, technology, surveillance, privacy, and First Amendment rights. He has litigated cases including ACLU v. Clapper, a challenge the NSA’s mass call-tracking program, Doe v. Mattis, a habeas challenge to the government’s military detention of a U.S. citizen in Iraq, and Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle v. Baltimore Police Department, a challenge to Baltimore’s mass aerial surveillance program. He joined the ACLU as a legal fellow from 2012 to 2014, then spent one year as a teaching fellow in the Technology Law & Policy Clinic at New York University School of Law, where he continued to serve as an adjunct professor of law from 2015 to 2022. He returned to the ACLU as a staff attorney in 2015. He is also an adjunct lecturer in law at UCLA School of Law.
Brett is a graduate of Stanford University and the University of Texas School of Law, where he was book review editor of the Texas Law Review and a human rights scholar at the Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice. After law school, he spent a year in Israel, serving as a foreign law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Asher Dan Grunis and as a volunteer attorney at Gisha Legal Center for Freedom of Movement. He then clerked for the Hon. Robert D. Sack of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and for Judge Richard J. Holwell and (after Judge Holwell’s resignation) Judge Lewis A. Kaplan of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
Featured work
Jun 26, 2014
The Drone Program Could Be Putting the Whole World at Risk
Jun 23, 2014
Five Takeaways from the Newly Released Drone Memo
Apr 21, 2014
Appeals Court Rules Government Can't Have It Both Ways on Targeted Killing
Apr 17, 2014
Guantánamo Dispatch: A Hard-Earned Trust in Peril
Apr 14, 2014
The FBI Derails the 9/11 Hearings at Guantánamo
Apr 2, 2014
Dragnet Surveillance and the English Language
Mar 19, 2014
PCLOB to Examine Legal Underpinnings of NSA Surveillance
Mar 14, 2014
Friends in High Places Support NSA Call-Tracking Lawsuit
Jan 30, 2014
How the Phone Dragnet Slipped Through Cracks in Oversight
Jan 20, 2014
MLK, Spying, and the “Urgency of the Moment”