American Civil Liberties Union

The Racial Justice Program aims to preserve and extend the constitutional rights of people of color. Committed to combating racism in all its forms, our advocacy includes litigation, community organizing and training, legislative initiatives, and public education. >> More about the Racial Justice Program.


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ACLU Report Reveals Arrests At Hartford-Area Schools On Rise
A recently released report by the ACLU and its affiliate, the ACLU of Connecticut, has brought to site the unusual number of police arrests of children in the Hartford area. According to this new study, the trend is one that disproportionately impacts children of color. The report shows how the use by school districts in Hartford, East Hartford and West Hartford of school resource officers who are not adequately trained and whose objectives are not clearly defined leads to the criminalization of students at the expense of their education.
> Report: Hard Lessons: School Resource Officer Programs and School-Based Arrests in Three Connecticut Towns
> Audio: ACLU Attorney Jamie Dycus on CBPN
> Hartford Courant Coverage

NYCLU, ACLU Warn NYPD about Illegal Arrests of Schoolchildren
The New York Civil Liberties Union and the American Civil Liberties Union have demanded that NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly immediately end the unlawful practice of arresting children in New York City public schools who have not committed crimes.
> Press Release
> School-to-Prison-Pipeline

ACLU Challenges State Department's Refusal To Issue Passports To U.S. Citizens
The ACLU, the ACLU of Texas and cooperating attorneys have sued the federal government on behalf of nine American citizens who have had their applications for U.S. passports denied because of their race and ancestry and because their births were attended to by midwives.
> Press Release
> Podcasts and Other Materials

Locking Up Our Children: ACLU Issues Report on Unjust Detention of Youth in Massachusetts (5/12/2008)

> Press Release
> Boston Globe: Justice by the Numbers (6/1/08)
> Boston Globe: Children Go to Jail, for Lack of Options (5/12/08)
A widespread practice in Massachusetts of locking up youth accused of minor offenses and who pose little or no danger to their communities is unfair, threatens public safety and wastes public money, according to a report released in May 2008 by the ACLU and the ACLU of Massachusetts. The report documents the use of detention by state judges as a rehabilitative tool to frighten youth never convicted of wrongdoing. The report also addresses the woeful lack of placement availability in the state's child welfare and mental health systems that leave detention as the only viable option for youth who cannot safely be returned to their homes. Locking Up Our Children is a follow-up report to a 2003 report by the ACLU, which documented the disproportionate representation of youth of color in Massachusett's juvenile justice system.


Lead plaintiff Milo Sheff at the time of the 1996 filing and in a recent photograph. Read the case profile >>
New Agreement in Hartford Desegregation Case (4/4/2008)
The ACLU, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the Center for Children's Advocacy and cooperating attorneys have struck an agreement with the state of Connecticut to implement compliance with a longstanding order from the state Supreme Court to desegregate Hartford public schools. The agreement, the latest stage in the case of Sheff v. O'Neill, for the first time requires the state to create a detailed roadmap to follow in its effort to end the racial segregation faced by Hartford's minority schoolchildren. The settlement has been approved by the Connecticut legislature and awaits approval by the judge in the case.
Read the ACLU press release >>
Read The Hartford Courant's call to action >>

SchooltoPrison.org
If you are a legal advocate working on challenges to the school-to-prison pipeline, please visit SchooltoPrison.org, sponsored by the ACLU Racial Justice Program and several of our allies.
Visit SchooltoPrison.org >>
ACLU Sues Over Failed Privately-Run Alternative School In Atlanta (3/11/2008)
The ACLU filed a class action lawsuit against the Atlanta Independent School System and Community Education Partners for violating students' constitutional right to an adequate public education. CEP is a for-profit corporation paid nearly $7 million a year by the city to run its alternative school, which is among the most dangerous and lowest performing schools in Georgia. More About Harris et al. v. Atlanta Independent School System >>
> More About the Kids At Risk



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ACLU Secures Religious Freedom For Muslim Prisoners At Wyoming State Penitentiary (11/20/2008)
RAWLINS, WY – The American Civil Liberties Union has struck an agreement with officials at the Wyoming State Penitentiary that will allow Muslim prisoners to maintain their religious practices and beliefs while still being able to eat daily meals.

ACLU Report Reveals Arrests At Hartford-Area Schools On Rise (11/17/2008)
HARTFORD, CT – Police arrests of students at Hartford-area schools are on the rise, according to a new American Civil Liberties Union report released today, a trend that disproportionately impacts children of color.

Sweeping Homeland Security Investigation Of Muslims Was Unconstitutional And Discriminatory, Says ACLU (10/31/2008)
WASHINGTON – A report in today’s New York Times revealed details of a 2004 Department of Homeland Security (DHS) anti-terrorism program that, despite government claims to the contrary, used racial profiling. More than 2,000 Muslim immigrants were investigated in the lead up to the 2004 elections, and many were interrogated right before the November election. Despite the investment of considerable resources, “Operation Front Line” produced minimal results. Most of those investigated were found to have done nothing wrong.

ACLU Releases Presidential Transition Plan To Restore Civil Liberties (10/27/2008)
WASHINGTON – In anticipation of the presidential election, the American Civil Liberties Union today released a set of detailed recommendations on steps that the new president should take to “clean house,” renew freedom, and restore the nation’s reputation.

ACLU Applauds Newly Enacted Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Act (10/8/2008)
Washington, DC – Last night, President Bush signed into law a bill to provide personnel and funds for federal investigations into murders and other crimes committed during the civil rights era. The Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Act authorizes the attorney general and the Department of Justice to spend $10 million annually over 10 years to investigate and prosecute these cold cases.


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