Celebrate Pride Month by Improving California Laws

June is Pride month, a month to celebrate the strength and activism of LGBTQ people. Communities across California honor the spirit of Pride every year with parades, marches, and other events. But as we celebrate, it’s also important to remember that even in California, we still have work to do to secure true, lived equality, particularly for LGBTQ people who are also part of other historically marginalized groups. That’s why we at the ACLU of California are excited to be working on three LGBTQ-related bills this year that will make life better for students, youth in foster care, and people in jail or prison.

By Amanda Goad

Two women with a child in a stroller in the foreground at a Pride Parade. One woman is holding a sign that reads We the People.

Open Letter: End California's Poverty Crisis

Dear Governor Brown, Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon: Today at the United Nations, Phillip Alston, the special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, condemned the U.S. and the state of California in a report that details failures to protect the

By Clarissa Woo Hermosillo

Placeholder image

California, Say Her Name

As stories of state violence against Black men and boys occupy many of the calls for police reform, countless stories of Black women and girls subjected to excessive force and police misconduct remain untold. We must say their names.

By Novella Coleman

#SayHerName

Running for Elected Prosecutor Will Never Be the Same

On June 5, California voters paid more attention to their local top prosecutor races than ever before. In elections where the incumbent has historically gone unchallenged, there were more contested DA races in California than in recent memory — or perhaps ever before. Although incumbents retained

By Yoel Haile

Placeholder image

OC Voters Have the Power to Demand Justice for Deaths in County Jails

Danny Pham, a 27-year-old Westminster native, was serving a six-month sentence in an Orange County jail for a non-violent offense. He was close to completing his sentence. Instead, he ended up dead.

By Esther Lim, Daisy Ramirez

Placeholder image

A New Bill Restores California’s Power to Fight Secret Surveillance

Law enforcement agencies are deploying secret and invasive surveillance technologies to collect sensitive location and biometric data, target local activists, and feed ICE's deportation machine. Technologies like drones, social media surveillance, and license plate readers have invaded people's private lives and are being exploited by the federal government to tear California families apart.

Stop secret surveillance and protect our communities. Support SB 1186. Photo of two women at a rally, one woman with a fist raised.

California Can Reduce the Number of Police Shootings. Here’s How.

Police in California have a problem with deadly force. Last year, police shot and killed 162 people in the state, half of whom did not have guns. California departments have some of the highest rates of killings in the nation. In a 2015 report, for example, the Guardian identified central California's Kern County as the place where a member of the public is most likely to die at the hands of police.

By Peter Bibring

8 police officers standing on a street outside, yellow police tape in the foreground.

Now is the Time for California Families and Communities to Advocate for Strong Sanctuary Policies in K-12 Schools

Last week, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra provided all California public school leaders with the policies they must adopt by July to protect students from immigration enforcement while at school. 

By Private: Ana Mendoza

Illustration of people on a school campus all facing a speaker in an outdoor area.

Greyhound Has a Choice on Warrantless Searches

It's a scene out of a dystopian police state: Your bus pulls into the station after a long ride, but before you can get off, law enforcement agents board and make their way down the aisle, peering at passengers. They see brown skin, or hear a foreign accent, and stop to demand identification, then proof of citizenship. Those who don’t satisfy their questions are escorted off the bus.

Man on sidewalk, holding a sign as a  Greyhound bus passes by: "Destination not deportation"