
Blog
We can be pretty sure that each new day will bring two things: new threats to our civil liberties, and new stories of people standing up for their rights and winning. Behind every court ruling is a person. Behind every landmark law is a movement. Read the stories and hear the voices that ground our work.
Constitutional Fail: Fresno County's Public Defense System is Broken
Jul 21, 2015
While the criminal justice system’s primary aim is to further public safety, all too often it is co-opted to perpetuate the history of racial inequality and economic injustice in the United States. Conscious and unconscious racial bias can impact every part of the criminal justice system, from initial stops and arrests, to bail decisions, charging practices, plea bargaining, sentencing, and time i...
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What Went Wrong with the Case of Francisco Lopez-Sanchez
Jul 14, 2015
The tragic shooting of Kate Steinle in San Francisco has focused national attention on why her accused assailant, Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, was released from the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department’s custody in April and not deported. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and others have rushed to cast blame on the sheriff’s department for Ms. Steinle’s death. But this horrible and apparently ran...
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San Francisco Needs to Take a Closer Look at Its Body Camera Plan
Jul 13, 2015
San Francisco, like many local communities, is considering the use of police body worn cameras, and the Board of Supervisors recently allocated $6.6 million for their purchase pending approval of a use policy. But for body cameras to deliver on their promise of accountability and promote public trust, there must be transparency and public trust in both the process that leads to a decision to adopt...
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VICTORY! Federal Judge Deep-Sixes Arizona’s Ridiculously Overbroad ‘Nude Photo’ Law
Jul 10, 2015
Arizona is a little bit freer today.With a federal court’s approval, we successfully settled our lawsuit over the state law that made our clients — booksellers, photographers, publishers, and librarians — risk a felony record for publishing images fully protected by the First Amendment. The plaintiffs in the case can now do their important work delivering newsworthy, artistic, and histor...
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10 Days Later
Jul 08, 2015
By the time Credy Madrid Calderon fled Honduras and sought asylum in the United States, he had been threatened, shot at and severely beaten by local gangs. Arriving in the United States, however, did not mean sanctuary for Credy. Instead of being reunited with his wife and children, all U.S. citizens, Credy found himself in an immigration jail. He waited there for months, uncertain of whether he w...
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Restoring Abortion Coverage and Achieving Reproductive Justice
Jul 08, 2015
With the introduction today of the Equal Access to Abortion Coverage in Health Insurance Woman Act, members of Congress declared not only that every woman who receives care or insurance through the federal government will have coverage for abortion services, but they also prohibited political interference with decisions by private health insurance companies to offer coverage for abortion care.
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New Bill Would Force Companies to Report "Terrorist Activity" to the Government
Jul 07, 2015
If there’s one thing the First Amendment stands for, it’s that vigorous debate about the issues of the day—even, and perhaps especially, uncomfortable debate about things like racism or terrorism—should be free from government interference. Tragically, that principle has been betrayed repeatedly over the past decade and a half, as law enforcement agencies continue to single out individuals for scr...
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California Shouldn't Lag on Police Reform
Jul 02, 2015
Brutality takes many forms. One kind takes your life away, another leaves your body broken. Perhaps the most insidious kind seeks you out and makes you feel terrified, harassed, unsafe, unprotected, as though people see you as a threat through no fault of your own.
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The Death Penalty Has an Innocence Problem — and Its Days Are Numbered
Jul 01, 2015
The demise of the death penalty is upon us. While the Supreme Court ruled this week to allow the continued use of a controversial lethal injection drug, Justice Stephen Breyer’s sweeping dissent invited the nation to question capital punishment’s constitutionality. If you have any doubt about the answer, just ask Henry McCollum or Paul House.
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A Mostly Blissful Marriage State of the Union
Jun 30, 2015
Unless you've been hiding under a rock or got lost under a mountain of glitter, you know that on Friday the Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that same-sex couples looking to tie the knot may do so in all 50 states. I was proud to stand on the steps of the Supreme Court with our clients as the decision came down, marking the victorious culmination of a 45-year battle towards marriage equality.
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Cure the Sickness, Take Down the Confederate Flag
Jun 26, 2015
Take down the confederate flag? Yes, of course. But cure the disorder that caused it to be raised in the first place. The scourge of racism cannot be defeated by simply taking down a flag.
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Hillary: It's Important to Say “Black Lives Matter”
Jun 25, 2015
This past Tuesday, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton gave a speech at a historic black church in Missouri, speaking on issues surrounding institutionalized racism in the aftermath of the Charleston, S.C. shooting. In talking about these issues, ones that specifically affect black and brown lives, Hillary chose to use the phrase “all lives matter.” We could almost hear the collective ...
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