Four years frozen in ICE

Like thousands of other people in 2006, Jose Franco was detained by immigration authorities. Most detainees are either deported to their country of origin or released after winning their right to remain in the United States.

By Ahilan Arulanantham

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Rep. Judy Chu video statement transcript

By ACLU of Southern California

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Banking on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration

By ACLU of Southern California

Locked Up

Amidst all the talk of immigration reform and the need to secure our borders, it's easy to forget that our government already imprisons thousands of immigrants for months, often years, in several hundred immigration detention centers scattered across the United States.

By Ahilan Arulanantham

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Celebrating Los Angeles' First Unionized Car Wash

Get

By ACLU of Southern California

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Locked up abroad—for the FBI

WHEN GULET MOHAMED FINALLY returned home on a chilly Virginia morning in January, the 19-year-old from Fairfax was wearing the same outfit he had on when he disappeared a month earlier in Kuwait. Clad in a fleece hat and a gray Real Madrid sweatshirt, the straggly-bearded, wide-eyed teenager stepped out of arrivals at Dulles Airport and into a phalanx of television cameras. He wore a bewildered smile—as if he was still unsure of what had happened to him but was just grateful it was over.

By ACLU of Southern California

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2011 Annual Report

The ACLU of Southern California recently released its 2011 Annual Report. Below is a welcome letter from ACLU/SC Executive Director Hector Villagra.

By ACLU of Southern California

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The Federal Government's (S-) Con Job

We warned you that the federal government had gotten into the snake-oil business with Secure Communities (S-Comm). Turns out that the actual purpose of S-Comm was just part of the story. The federal government also misled state and local governments, as well as the public, about whether or not the program was voluntary. 

By Hector Villagra

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Terminate "Secure Communities"

The ACLU of Southern California is calling for an end to Secure Communities (S-Comm), a federal immigration enforcement program that threatens public safety, undermines civil liberties and leads to deportation of people with minor offenses and no criminal convictions at all.

By ACLU of Southern California

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