Police Misconduct Needs 'Broken Windows' Approach

On the same day a female Los Angeles Police officer was sentenced to 36 months for delivering hard kicks to the groin of a handcuffed woman who later died, a homeless woman with mental illness was facing 25 years to life for merely picking up a police baton. How do we account for this disparity? How do we reconcile local prosecutors giving police officers the benefit of every real or imagined mitigating circumstance while civilians are routinely overcharged with crimes carrying the most severe penalties?

By Hector Villagra

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How keeping police shooting videos secret hurts the public: Guest commentary

Earlier this month, a federal judge released disturbing video of Gardena Police officers shooting an unarmed man to death and wounding another — footage the city and its police department fought to keep from the public. That fight shows why we can’t leave it to police departments’ discretion whether to be transparent on deadly force, but badly need state law to make information like this available to the public.

By Hector Villagra

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ACLU SoCal Files Lawsuit over Misappropriated Education Funds

By Anna Bauer

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The Court has ruled but much work remains

The Supreme Court issued a historic ruling on June 26, 2015, granting same-sex couples the freedom to marry throughout the United States. As ACLU client Jim Obergefell and his co-plaintiffs stood triumphantly on the Court’s steps, advocates across the country celebrated this victory and the decades of work that brought it to fruition. From filing the very first lawsuit arguing for the freedom to marry in 1970 to representing Edie Windsor in the case that took down the Defense of Marriage Act to being counsel in 16 other federal marriage equality cases since 2013, the ACLU has been at the forefront of the fight for legal recognition of same-sex relationships.

By Melissa Goodman

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What went wrong with the case of Francisco Lopez-Sanchez

By Jennie Pasquarella and Kate Desormeau

By Jennie Pasquarella

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ICE vs. the Constitution

The following was originally published in the Los Angeles Times.We should not shred the Constitution in the face of tragedy. In the wake of the shooting death of Kathryn Steinle in San Francisco, the Sheriff's Department is being blamed for having released the man now charged with killing her, Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, from jail. Presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, among others, has said the city should have honored a federal request, known as a detainer, to keep Lopez-Sanchez in custody.B

By Hector Villagra

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10 days later

By Carmen Iguina and Zara Lockshin

By Carmen Iguina

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California shouldn't lag on police reform

By Jessica Farris

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Lie is exposed; deputies convicted

The deputies’ brazen lies were exposed in photographs taken a day after Gabriel Carrillo was brutally beaten when he went to the Los Angeles County Jail to visit his brother.

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