A breakthrough agreement between the ACLU/SC and top L.A. leaders will create 1,250 new permanent low-income housing units for the city. ACLU/SC Executive Director Ramona Ripston said it offers "real hope" for an end to homelessness in L.A.

The new housing comes as part of the final settlement of Jones vs. City of L.A., a case brought by the ACLU/SC and the law firm of Carol Sobel to stop police from arresting homeless in L.A.'s Skid Row for sitting or sleeping on the streets when they had nowhere else to go. The 9th Circuit Court ruled in our favor in April 2006, stating that "involuntary sitting, lying, or sleeping on public sidewalks ... is an unavoidable consequence of being human and homeless without shelter in the City of Los Angeles."

L.A.'s law barring people from sitting or sleeping on the streets 24 hours a day is the nation's harshest, and the city agreed not to enforce it at night until the new housing is built, which will take several years.

In addition to the ACLU/SC and Sobel, the settlement was signed by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and representatives of the City Council, City Attorney, and L.A. Police Department. "This is a good first step in what should be a major effort by our city to provide affordable housing for all its residents," said Ripston.

Date

Wednesday, October 10, 2007 - 12:00am

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The L.A. Police Department's investigation into officers' excessive use of force at MacArthur Park on May 1 is a "constructive step toward addressing the root causes of improper use of force," the ACLU/SC said in a statement today. The long-awaited report was delivered to the L.A. Police Commission five months after officers beat and fired rubber bullets at peaceful protesters. It included some shocking admissions:

- Officers and supervisors believed they were free to use batons and rubber bullets against peaceful protesters who were not moving quickly enough.

- LAPD units have developed their own use-of-force training, without central oversight over what is taught.

"If the Department fails to respond to these systemic problems, then it has slept through another wake-up call," ACLU/SC staff attorney Peter Bibring told the commissioners and dozens of victims of May 1 at City Hall.

Date

Tuesday, October 9, 2007 - 12:00am

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The ACLU/SC and the law firm of Munger, Tolles & Olsen have discovered urgent new information about the extent of forcible drugging of immigrants by the Department of Homeland Security and the policies that govern it. The information is detailed in legal papers being filed Tuesday, October 9, that seek an immediate stop to the government's program of drugging immigrants with powerful anti-psychotic medicine against their will and without proper medical oversight.

The government now admits it routinely gives powerful anti-psychotic drugs to immigrants before deportation. In many cases these detainees have no preexisting psychiatric conditions, and the drugs are administered was prescribed by low-level medical personnel and without a court order.

In answers submitted to Sen. Joe Lieberman before her confirmation hearing as chief of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Sept. 12, Julie Myers admitted that 56 detainees 'received psychotropic medications during the removal process' during the seven-month period from October 2006 until April 2007. More than half - 33 - were forcibly drugged despite having no preexisting psychiatric condition.

Myers did not provide data for the use of psychotropic medications before October 2006, but based on more general data that she provided, the ACLU infers that hundreds of unauthorized druggings have taken place since 2003. During that time, DHS ordered 1,073 'medical escorts,' often low-level medical personnel prepared to forcibly drug immigrants during deportation. Although earlier government statements gave the impression that such druggings were extremely rare, the newly-released numbers indicate that the practice is routine and widespread.

Myers also referred to a new ICE policy that claims to require a court order before forcibly drugging detainees during deportation. Court documents show that the policy was adopted two days after the ACLU of Southern California and the law firm of Munger, Tolles & Olsen filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of two immigrants, Raymond Soeoth and Amadou Diouf, who were drugged against their will and without proper medical oversight.

In her answers to questions before her confirmation hearing, Myers stated, 'I am aware of, and deeply concerned about reports that past practices may not have conformed to ICE detention standards.' Myers was confirmed Sept. 26.

However, the new policy does not describe what court would order the druggings, whether detainees would be able to challenge the order, or what the requirements for obtaining a court order are. The policy also contains an exception for 'emergency' druggings that would not require a court order, and the government has claimed that many drugging incidents, such as those involving both Diouf and Soeoth, were 'emergencies.' Nor did the government give any indication that its new policy was actually being implemented in the field.

These statistics are the first glimpse at a largely unknown program of drugging detainees that has gone on for years with no oversight. Previously the government had admitted only that they forcibly injected immigrants with powerful drugs 'as a last resort' in order to render them less 'agitated' for deportation. Yet detention standards from the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) state that detainees may not be forcibly medicated if they are not mentally ill, simply for 'staff convenience.'

In light of the new information, the October 9 filing asks U.S. District Court Judge Terry J. Hatter to reconsider his earlier decision to postpone briefing on the ACLU/SC and Munger, Tolles & Olsen's request for a preliminary injunction to stop the forced drugging program.

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Tuesday, October 9, 2007 - 12:00am

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