Mohammad Tasjar

Mohammad Tajsar

Pronouns: He/him/his

Senior Staff Attorney

Advocacy

Bio

Mohammad Tajsar is a senior staff attorney at the ACLU of Southern California. He joined the organization in 2017. Primarily a litigator, Mohammad’s work focuses on national security and counterterrorism policy, as well as government surveillance and consumer privacy. Mohammad’s current docket includes Fazaga v. FBI, a challenge to the FBI’s surveillance of mosques in Orange County, and Adlerstein v. Customs and Border Protection, a constitutional challenge to the surveillance and detention of immigrant rights lawyers and non-profit leaders. He also has significant experience protecting individuals' civil rights and privacy against public and private sector use of surveillance technology, and regularly speaks on digital rights, consumer privacy, and how communities and consumers can protect themselves online and in the world.

Prior to joining the ACLU, Mohammad served as an associate at Hadsell Stormer Renick & Dai LLP, a Pasadena, California-based law firm specializing in civil rights and workers’ rights.

Mohammad began his legal career as a law clerk in United States District Court for the District of Nevada and a legal fellow at the ACLU of Southern California. He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law, and from UCLA.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
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  • First Amendment and Democracy

UCLA suppressed student and faculty freedom of speech. So, we sued them.

Following the violent destruction of the Palestine Solidarity Encampment on the UCLA campus, students and faculty members speak out.
News & Commentary
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  • First Amendment and Democracy

Open Letter to UCLA to Protect Rights of Student Protesters

In response to acts of mob violence on UCLA’s campus last night, the ACLU Foundation of Southern California sent a letter to UCLA Chancellor Gene Block denouncing efforts to suppress the peaceful right to free expression and dissent.