Stephanie Krent
Stephanie Krent is a staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute, where she focuses on government transparency, surveillance in the federal prison system, and social media censorship.
She is a core member of the team seeking the disclosure of secret Office of Legal Counsel opinions through two lawsuits, Campaign for Accountability v. Department of Justice and Francis v. Department of Justice. The OLC is the component of the Department of Justice that issues legal opinions that bind executive branch officials on matters of significant public concern and. She recently co-authored an op-ed in Columbia Journalism Review on the importance of pushing against the OLC’s pervading secrecy to inform journalists, historians, and the public at large.
Additionally, she leads the Knight Institute’s litigation in Knight Institute v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, which seeks records concerning the Bureau of Prisons’ digitization, retention, and surveillance of mail sent to people incarcerated in federal jails and prisons. She also litigates PETA v. Tabak, which challenges health agencies’ practice of blocking social media comments containing keywords associated with viewpoints critical of animal testing.
She has been quoted in Reuters, The Hill, and The Intercept amongst other publications. Krent was previously a legal fellow for the Institute from the fall of 2019 until September 2020. Prior to joining the Institute, Krent clerked for Judge Edgardo Ramos of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and Judge Julio M. Fuentes of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She also worked as an associate at Jenner & Block. She is a graduate of Barnard College and Yale Law School. During law school, she received the Harlan Fiske Stone Prize for best oral argument in Moot Court and the Potter Stewart Prize for best oral and written advocacy by a team in Moot Court. She also served as a comments editor on the Yale Law Journal.
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Deep Dive
NYC’s nightmarish plan to prohibit physical mail in jails should be abandoned
A move to digitize this correspondence has proved in the past to dramatically undermine the expressive and privacy rights of both incarcerated and unincarcerated people
By Stephanie Krent -
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Essays and Scholarship
A Safe Harbor for Platform Research
Knight Institute policy paper proposes legal protection for certain research and newsgathering projects focused on platforms
By Alex Abdo , Ramya Krishnan , Stephanie Krent , Evan Welber Falcón & Andrew Keane Woods -
Quick Take
North Carolina Becomes the Latest State to Digitize Mail in Prisons
Program ratchets up surveillance and raises serious First Amendment concerns
By Stephanie Krent -
Deep Dive
Writing to Someone in Prison? Uncle Sam May Keep a Copy.
Knight Institute lawsuit aims to bring new surveillance program to light
By Stephanie Krent -
Analysis
Recently Released OLC Opinions From 1974 Shed Light on Current Legal Debates
Disclosure, not secrecy, should be the norm for OLC opinions
By Stephanie Krent -
Analysis
Revised Justice Department Policy Still Silences Immigration Judges
Policy prevents judges from speaking out without prior approval
By Stephanie Krent