Rachel Goodman
Rachel Goodman is a Staff Attorney on the Racial Justice Program of the American Civil Liberties Union, where she focuses on economic justice issues, particularly on discrimination in housing and lending. She represents the plaintiffs in Sandvig v. Lynch, a constitutional challenge to the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act brought on behalf of computer researchers and journalists wishing to test websites for discrimination but chilled by the prospect of criminal liability, and in Adkins v. Morgan Stanley, which alleges that Morgan Stanley’s mortgage securitization business had a discriminatory impact on African-American homeowners in Detroit. Ms. Goodman also drafts amicus briefs for proceedings at all levels and engages in direct advocacy to private companies on data and discrimination issues, in partnership with privacy advocates and technologists inside and outside of the ACLU. She clerked for the Honorable Joseph A. Greenaway, III on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She graduated magna cum laude from New York University School of Law, where she was an Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Fellow, and from Yale College.
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