Open Letter: Jackie Lacey Must Stop Relying on Law Enforcement Officers with Histories of Misconduct, Dishonesty, & Racism to Prosecute L.A. County Residents

Every Day, prosecutors across Los Angeles County depend on law enforcement officers to prove cases against community members. Precinct reports, officer observations, and police testimony are commonly considered by judges and juries as the strongest pieces of evidence against the accused. But, not only should an officer's word be subject to the same level of scrutiny as that of the general public, growing reports of law enforcement misconduct highlight the danger of formulaically depending on officers to secure a conviction. District Attorney Jackie Lacey can stop this insidious practice of prosecuting cases that hinge upon the testimony of law enforcement officers with demonstrated histories of dishonesty, violence, and racism.

Jackie Lacey Must Stop Relying on Law Enforcement Officers with Histories of Misconduct, Dishonesty, & Racism to Prosecute L.A. County Residents

The Trump Administration’s Proposed “Mixed Status” Housing Rule Is Another Form of Family Separation

The world has watched in horror as migrant families have been forcibly separated, placed into camps, and subjected to the cruel conditions of detention, as part of the Trump administration's sustained assault on immigrant rights. The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) proposed

HUD Agents

How to Help Families at the Border Right Now

The images of Oscar Alberto Martínez Ramírez and his daughter Valeria, who lost their lives trying to seek refuge in the United States, have left us haunted. They serve as an ever-important reminder of the urgency of the fight for immigrant justice on our southern border and the need to stand up to the Trump administration's policies denying humanitarian protection and basic due process to families fleeing for their lives. 

Demonstrators carrying signs with the text "Families Belong Together"

Fighting for Black Trans Women this Pride and Beyond

This Pride weekend, as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion, let's march, let's celebrate, let's party. But first let us remember today and always that the lives of Black trans people, and specifically the lives of Black trans women, matter. Let's recognize and memorialize

By Arneta Rogers

A Trans flag as the background, in the foreground a silhouette of a person with text that reads: #SayHerName Michelle Washington Mulaysia Booker Jazzaline Ware Ashanti Carmon Claire Legato Dana Martin Chynal Lindsey Chanel Scurlock Michelle Simone

America, It Is Time to Talk About Reparations

We are two months away from the 400th anniversary of the first enslaved people arriving in what would become the United States of America. It is time to renew the public discussion about reparations to descendants of Africans who were enslaved as our country was forming and growing rich.

By Jeffery Robinson

Illustration of a Black man who is a slave, a man in KKK dress holding a rope for lynching, a banner that reads: "A man was lynched yesterday", a Black man with a sign that reads: "I am a man," and a man holding a flag that reads: "Black Lives Matter"

Abortion: The Hate Stops Here

Since January, politicians (overwhelmingly male) have passed laws severely restricting abortions in six states — Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio. These politicians have stopped pretending that their restrictions are about making abortion care safer. These laws are about taking away the right to abortion.

By Jennifer Chou, Ruth Dawson, Amanda Le

Abortion is healthcare. Abortion is a right.

Black Trans Women Are Being Murdered in the Streets. Now the Trump Administration Wants to Turn Us Away From Shelters and Health Care.

It has been a horrific week for transgender and non-binary people. Muhlaysia Booker, Claire Legato, and Michelle Simone are Black trans women who have been murdered in the past week. At least five Black trans women have been killed so far in 2019.

By LaLa Holston-Zannell

Protesters at rally

When We See Them

The Netflix series "When They See Us" reminds us that the power of a story isn't its content or delivery. It's more fundamental. The power of a story lies in who gets to tell the story and who listens.

By Jess Farris

"When They See Us" Netflix poster

Does Orange County truly care about people experiencing homelessness?

When the ACLU of Southern California released a report revealing horrific living conditions in three Orange County-funded emergency shelters, the world paid attention.

By Eve Garrow, Julia Devanthéry

A handwritten page of somebody's journal, with title text that reads: "This Place is Slowly Killing Me: Abuse and Neglect in Orange County Emergency Shelters"