Happy Pride Month!

 It's time to unfold your rainbow flags and join the ACLU/SC as we proudly kick off LGBT Pride month during June.  This is the month each year when the LGBT community celebrates our diversity, strength, and accomplishments.

By James Gilliam

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D.A. Gets It Wrong in O.C. Gang Injunction

We need checks on the government’s power -- we needed them when the country was founded, and we need them now -- because the government can and frequently does get it wrong.  And, when the government mistakenly marshals its resources against an individual, it can cause great harm. 

By Hector Villagra

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Judge backs war vet’s upside-down flag protest outside VA property

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By ACLU of Southern California

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Citizen Invokes Right to an Attorney, FBI Retaliates by Revoking Wife's Visa

(LOS ANGELES)-The ACLU of Southern California announced that it has filed a lawsuit on behalf of American citizen Samy Ali, to challenge the federal government’s revocation of his wife’s visa in retaliation for his exercising the right to counsel during FBI questioning.  The case was filed in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

By ACLU of Southern California

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ACLU of California Urges Sentencing Reform To Reduce California Prison Population

Los Angeles – The U.S. Supreme Court today ordered the state of California to reduce its prison population in order to alleviate extreme overcrowding that endangers the health and safety of the state’s prisoners and prison staff.  The court ordered California to reduce its prison population to 137.5 percent of capacity. The system is nearly at 200 percent of capacity.

By ACLU of Southern California

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Domestic Violence Victim's 911 Call for Help Results in Deportation Proceedings

By ACLU of Southern California

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ACLU wins 'major victory' over gang injunctions

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By ACLU of Southern California

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Government Lies to Cover Up Secrets in Surveillance Case

The federal government’s use of secrecy and deception in the name of national security reached a new low last week, when Obama administration lawyers argued that they had the right to lie to a federal court in the name of national security by denying even the fact that they were keeping secret records about a group of Southern California residents.   While the Court excoriated the government for lying, the Obama administration has defended its actions, raising fears that it will continue the practice in other cases.  Read the Amended Order

By Ahilan Arulanantham

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Reader Privacy Act Approved By CA State Senate

SACRAMENTO – Today, the California State Senate unanimously approved the Reader Privacy Act of 2011 – legislation that would require government agencies to seek a warrant in order to access consumers’ reading records from bookstores and online retailers. The bill – SB 602 authored by Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco) – would establish consumer protections for book purchases similar to long-established privacy laws for library records. 

By ACLU of Southern California

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