Affluent Beach City Sued for Treating Disabled Homeless People as Criminals

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The ACLU of Southern California and the law firm of Irell & Manella LLP along with Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California, Irvine School of Law, have jointly sued Laguna Beach over the affluent beach city's unconstitutional and inhumane policy of harassing, intimidating, citing and arresting disabled homeless people. The lawsuit - on behalf of certain homeless residents -- was filed today in federal district court in Orange County.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Appeals Court Rebuffs Effort to End School Desegregation Programs

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The Los Angeles Unified School District must continue to run desegregation programs that provide all children access to a quality education, a state court of appeal ruled today in a decision that agreed with the ACLU of Southern California's position that the key programs should stand.

By ACLU of Southern California

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LAPD Skid Row Officers Banned from Unlawful Searches under Settlement with the ACLU/SC and National Lawyers Guild

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The Los Angeles City Council has approved a settlement that bans LAPD officers patrolling Skid Row from conducting unconstitutional searches of homeless individuals, and requires that officers undergo crucial training regarding the constitutional requirements to search and detain people.

By ACLU of Southern California

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ACLU/SC Demands Big Bear High School Officials Reverse Decision to Prohibit Student from Wearing Anti-Prop. 8 T-shirt

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - A high-school class president who was prohibited from wearing a homemade 'Prop. 8 Equals HATE' T-shirt at school must be allowed to wear it because the message is protected free speech under both the federal and state constitutions as well as state statute, the ACLU of Southern California has told officials of Big Bear High School.

By ACLU of Southern California

U.S. Complicit in American's Detention and Torture in the U.A.E.

Over three months ago, a U.S. citizen named Naji Hamdan was arrested by the State Security forces of the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.). He was detained without charges or access to a lawyer until the ACLU filed a lawsuit on his behalf. He has since been released into criminal custody in the U.A.E., and reports that he was severely tortured while in detention, apparently in the presence of American officials. Throughout, the U.S. government claimed to know nothing about why he was detained.

By ACLU of Southern California

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U.S. Embassy Will Protest to Government of United Arab Emirates Over Treatment of American Citizen, Who Says U.S. Officials Participated in His Interrogation and Torture

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The U.S. Embassy will protest to the government of the United Arab Emirates regarding the treatment of American citizen Naji Hamdan, who was severely tortured during the three months he was imprisoned by state security forces in the U.A.E.

By ACLU of Southern California

U.S. Citizen Severely Tortured While Detained in the United Arab Emirates at the Behest of the United States

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - An American man detained in the United Arab Emirates at the behest of the U.S. government has been released from state security custody and transferred to a prison in Abu Dhabi, but only after suffering severe torture. Naji Hamdan's transfer came only one week after lawyers for the ACLU of Southern California filed a lawsuit seeking his release.

By ACLU of Southern California

ACLU/SC Sues to Free American Citizen Imprisoned In the Middle East on the Orders of the U.S. Government

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The ACLU of Southern California has filed a lawsuit to force the release of an American citizen who has been imprisoned for 80 days without charge in the United Arab Emirates at the behest of the U.S. government.

By ACLU of Southern California

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California Supreme Court Grants Review In Prop 8 Legal Challenges: Court To Determine Constitutionality Of Prop 8

(San Francisco, California, November 19, 2008)'Today the California Supreme Court granted review in the legal challenges to Proposition 8, which passed by a narrow margin of 52 percent on November 4. In an order issued today, the Court agreed to hear the case and set an expedited briefing schedule. The Court also denied an immediate stay.

By ACLU of Southern California

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