Skip to main content
ACLUNC Logo
ACLU NorCal Logo

Secondary Navigation

  • Blog
  • Need Legal Help?
  • Contact
  • Donate

Mega Menu

  • Who We Are
    Who We Are

    The ACLU of Northern California is one of the largest ACLU affiliates in the nation with more than 100,000 members. Join us.

    Main menu

    • History
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Financial Reports
    • Privacy Statement
    • Land Acknowledgement Statement

    Main menu

    • Work With Us
      • Jobs
      • Contract Opportunities
      • Internships
      • Fellowships
      • Volunteering
  • What We Do
    What We Do

    We make sure that Constitutional rights — to free speech, to privacy, to due process — don’t just exist on paper, but also in practice.

    Main menu

    • Know Your Rights
    • Legislation
    • Legal Docket
    • Racial Justice Act

    Main menu

    • Issues
      • Criminal Law Reform
      • Economic Justice
      • Free Speech
      • Immigrants' Rights
      • Indigenous Justice
      • LGBTQ+ Rights
      • Open Government
      • Police Practices
      • Privacy & Technology
      • Racial Justice
      • Reproductive Justice
      • Rights of Unhoused People
      • Schools
      • Voting Rights
  • News
    News

    Our lawyers and advocates are among the nation's leading experts on civil liberties. For media inquiries, please contact (415) 621-2493 (press@aclunc.org).

    Main menu

    • Blog
    • Press Releases
    • Newsletter
    • Publications
  • Take Action
    Take Action

    Real change starts with you — and every one of us can help make a difference. Learn more about how you can take action.

    Main menu

    • Activist Resource Hub
    • Become a Member
    • Chapters

    Main menu

    • Donate Now
      • Estate Plan Gifts
      • Gifts of Stock
      • Tribute Gifts
      • FAQ
  • Know Your Rights
    Know Your Rights

    We work with communities to make sure people are informed about their rights.

    Main menu

    • Free Speech, Protests & Demonstrations
    • If ICE Confronts You
    • Police Interactions
Search

Sep 29, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Travelers’ Privacy Protection Act Introduced

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.

Main Article Content

Sep 26, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Pocket Protectors

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:

Main Article Content

Sep 16, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Don’t Let Your Privacy Rights Be Chipped Away!

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.

Main Article Content

Sep 16, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Kebin Reyes v. Alcantar
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 during a raid in which ICE officials arrested his father, who is from Guatemala.

Main Article Content

For Immediate Release: Sep 15, 2008
Media Contact: press@aclunc.org, (415) 621-2493

Article Media

ACLU of Northern CA
  • Read more about Special Campaign Issue 2008

Download the Special Campaign Issue 2008 ACLU-NC and read about our latest events and initiatives.

 

Main Article Content

Sep 05, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Important Ninth Circuit Ruling for California Privacy Rights

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.

Main Article Content

Sep 05, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Stopping Abuse of Native-American Schoolchildren

Main Article Content

Sep 05, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Safeguarding Equal Educational Opportunity in Modesto

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 Education, Office of Civil Rights, alleging that the Modesto school district disproportionately disciplined African-American students.

Main Article Content

Sep 05, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Overturning School Expulsions
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.

Main Article Content

Sep 05, 2008

Article Media

  • Read more about Ending Anti-Gay Harassment on Campus

"I can't remember a day at school when I wasn't called a faggot or gay," said Robby Martinazzi. Throughout elementary and middle school, Robby had been the target of taunts, physical abuse, and name-calling based on his sexual orientation. After years of asking officials at his Lake County school district to intervene, Robby's parents called the ACLU of Northern California.

Main Article Content

Pagination

  • Previous
  • 707
  • 708
  • 709
  • 710
  • 711
  • 712
  • 713
  • 714
  • 715
  • Next
Subscribe to
Hands in the Air

Become a Member

Real change starts with you – and every one of us can help make a difference.

Join Us

Stay Informed

Sign up for ACLU updates

Social Media Links

ACLUNC Logo

Footer menu

  • Who We Are
    • History
    • Staff
    • Boards of Directors
    • Work with Us
    • Financials & Reports
  • What We Do
    • Our Work
    • Know Your Rights
    • Legislation
    • Legal Docket
    • Need Legal Help?
  • News
    • Blog
    • Newsletters
    • Press Releases
    • Publications
  • Take Action
    • Actions
    • Become a Member
    • Chapters
  • Donate
    • General Information
    • Estate Plan Gifts
    • Gifts of Stock
    • Tribute Gifts
    • Membership
    • FAQ

Media Contact: (415) 621-2493 (press@aclunc.org) | User Agreement | Privacy Statement | Fraud Alert

ACLUNC Logo

Main Navigation -- Offcanvas

  • Who We Are
    • History
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Jobs
    • Contract Opportunities
    • Internships
    • Volunteering
    • Financial Reports
  • What We Do
    • Legislation
    • Legal Docket
    • Criminal Justice
    • Democratic & Civic Engagement
    • Gender, Sexuality & Reproductive Justice
    • Immigrants' Rights
    • Racial & Economic Justice
    • Technology & Civil Liberties
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press Releases
    • Newsletters
    • Publications
  • Take Action
    • Become a Member
    • Chapters
    • Events
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Estate Plan Gifts
    • Tribute Gifts
    • Gifts of Stock
    • FAQ
  • Know Your Rights
    • Police Interactions for Black and Brown People
    • Your Right to Demonstrate
    • Police Interactions

Secondary Navigation

  • Blog
  • Need Legal Help?
  • Contact
  • Donate