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Engquist v. Oregon Department of Agriculture, 07-474
02/27/2008

DISCRIMINATION

Whether public employees who are subject to arbitrary discrimination can raise an equal protection claim without also being required to show that the discrimination was based on membership in a protected class. DECIDED

In 2000, the Supreme Court ruled that the constitutional guarantee of equal treatment under the law applies to every "person," and therefore individuals who have been treated unequally by the government can raise an equal protection claim even if they only represent a "class of one." The question in this case is whether the same principle applies to public employees. The ACLU asserts that it does, in an amicus brief filed with a coalition of other civil rights groups. At a minimum, the brief argues, any rule that public employees must establish group membership to raise an equal protection claim cannot be read so broadly that it would sanction job discrimination based on age, disability or sexual orientation because those characteristics have not yet been treated as suspect classifications under the Constitution.

Legal Documents
> Engquist v. Oregon Department of Agriculture - ACLU Amicus Brief (2/27/2008)



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