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ACLU of Northern CA
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Governor Signs Important Disaster Victim Protection Bill

Sep 30, 2008
A bill requiring public employees who provide evacuees with disaster-related assistance to do so without asking for information or documents not strictly necessary to determine eligibility for the services, AB 2327 (Caballero), was signed into law by the governor yesterday. Civil rights organizations that had provided assistance to victims of last year's California wildfires applauded the bill. Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Travelers’ Privacy Protection Act Introduced

Sep 29, 2008
We have blogged about the invasive new border search policies that allow copying of books, documents and data, as well as intrusive questioning, all without probable cause and in conflict with decades of legal precedents.The Travelers' Privacy Protection Act restores privacy protections, while still enabling federal border agents to retain foreign intelligence information by obtaining a warrant.Se... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Pocket Protectors

Sep 26, 2008
In case you missed it on our National ACLU blog, here is an entry written by the ACLU's Matt Bors about federal policies that allow DHS to search international travelers without consent or any suspicion of wrongdoing:Previously we've discussed the push to search under travellers' clothes with the naked machine and the million nameson the terrorist watch list. The latest Civil Discourse comic exami... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Don’t Let Your Privacy Rights Be Chipped Away!

Sep 16, 2008
Would you allow a stranger to sift through your purse or wallet and take your driver's license? Would you want your children or grandchildren to tell passers-by on the street what school they attend or their student ID numbers?Of course not. You know it is important to protect your and your family's personal information.But any time that tiny computer chips called Radio Frequency Identification (R... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Case

Kebin Reyes v. Alcantar

Sep 16, 2008
A settlement was finalized September 16 between the ACLU Foundation of Northern California and the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE) in its case involving Kebin Reyes, a U.S. citizen who was six years old when he was illegally detained for ten hours by immigration officials. We argued that Kebin's constitutional rights were violated when he was taken from his home in San Rafael... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Important Ninth Circuit Ruling for California Privacy Rights

Sep 05, 2008
In an important victory for privacy rights, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday reinstated a portion of California's landmark financial privacy law that allows consumers to prevent banks from sharing information with affiliated companies about a customer's savings account or buying habits.The California Financial Information Privacy Act, which the ACLU worked to pass for many years, has b... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Stopping Abuse of Native-American Schoolchildren

Sep 05, 2008
It was a child's simple refusal to give up a bandana belonging to his recently deceased grandfather that led to a landmark settlement regarding discriminatory discipline against Native-American students at the hands of the Bishop Union Elementary School District (BUESD). Bishop, located in the eastern Sierras, has a population of about 3,400, with approximately 1,500 members of the Paiute Tribe... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Safeguarding Equal Educational Opportunity in Modesto

Sep 05, 2008
In 2001, an African-American student at Grace Davis High School in Modesto was involved in a fight with another student over race–the other student called him a "nigger." While the black student was suspended for more than a month and then transferred to another school, the white student was suspended only briefly.The African-American student's family filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of ... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Overturning School Expulsions

Sep 05, 2008
The rights of two African-American students were violated when they were expelled from Deer Valley High School following an off-campus incident in which police officers pepper-sprayed the students and forcefully arrested them, a judge ruled in May 2008. The judge overturned the expulsions. Read More