How many of your new Facebook friends are undercover cops?

By Yaman Salahi, Arthur Liman fellow This is the second in a two-part series of posts covering the impact of proposed changes to two major Los Angeles Police Department programs related to intelligence-gathering. Do you know who your Facebook friends are? Now that the Los Angeles Police Commission has approved new guidelines that allow LAPD to vastly expand its online spying operations, you should think twice.

By ACLU of Southern California

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New CA law ensures public school students aren't charged illegal fees

A bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown this weekend will help ensure that public school districts don't charge students illegal fees to participate in educational activities.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Buses, bookworms, and bullies

By Joey Hernández, LGBTQ Student Rights Advocate

By ACLU of Southern California

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Protecting our protectors

By Michael Kaufman, Staff Attorney A Democratic consultant ignited a firestorm several months ago when she questioned whether Ann Romney – who had tweeted that raising five children had been “hard work” – had “actually worked a day in her life.” Commentators from both sides of the aisle roundly criticized the consultant. The message was clear: taking care of a family is real work, and our society should value domestic work as much as paycheck-earning employment.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Incidents expose flaws in civilian oversight of Sheriff's Dept.

Revelations of brutality by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies and cover-ups inside the jails have exposed significant shortcomings in the department's civilian watchdog system, which was created to prevent such misconduct.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Giving immigrant detainees a break

The Obama administration has been ordered to give immigrants bail hearings if they've been detained in the L.A. area for more than six months. That's fair. U.S. District Judge Terry J. Hatter Jr. last week ordered the Obama administration to provide bail hearings for certain immigrants who have been detained in Southern California for more than six months to determine whether their continued detention is warranted. Hatter's decision is a welcome development that could help restore some much-needed fairness to the troubled detention system. We hope the administration accepts the court's ruling.

By ACLU of Southern California

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One year without DADT

By Jason Howe, Director of Communications Did you hear on the news about the mass exodus of a half-million troops from the U.S. military?

By ACLU of Southern California

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And pigs "may" fly

By Hector Villagra, Executive Director John Morton, the director of U.S. Immigrations and Enforcement (ICE), has suggested that policies that restrict compliance with immigration detainers "may" violate federal law. If he thinks this is true of the TRUST Act, a bill that now sits on Governor Brown's desk, all I can say is this: Yes, and pigs "may" fly.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Veterans in Los Angeles, still in the Cold

When is the Veterans Affairs Department going to meet its responsibility to house chronically homeless veterans in Los Angeles on the large tract of government-owned land that should have been put to this use long ago?

By ACLU of Southern California

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