Helping Innocent People Who Are Wrongly Imprisoned

Last week, two men who had been sentenced to death 30 years ago were proven innocent by DNA testing. Henry Lee McCollum and Leon Brown were teenagers when they were wrongly accused of the brutal rape and murder of a child in North Carolina. One of the most shocking parts of the story is that prosecutors hid evidence that linked a convicted rapist to the murder, a man who went on to kill another child while McCollum and Brown were wrongly imprisoned.

By Katherine Williams

Scales of Justice

Support for California’s Death Penalty is in Rapid Decline

As the former District Attorney of Los Angeles County, a county that sends more people to death row than the entire state of Texas, I know that the death penalty is deeply emotional, highly divisive, and very political. However, both sides of the death penalty debate can agree on one thing: California’s death penalty system is broken beyond repair.

By Gil Garcetti

Blog author Gil Garcetti

No Privacy Policy for New BART App - Now That’s A Suspicious Activity

“BART Watch" is a new app designed to encourage users to report suspicious activities. But we’re calling out this app for its own suspicious activities - having no privacy policy that explains the sensitive information it collects and may be sharing with others, and for encouraging people to file potentially spurious complaints about innocent residents.

Bay Area Rapid Transit Police logo

Police Drones? Get a Warrant.

Get a warrant -- that’s what I would say if the police showed up at my door asking to look around. Why? Because it’s my right. It’s one of the core principles that this country was founded on: the government, including local police, can’t come into my home unless they prove to a judge that they have a real reason to invade my privacy.

By Natasha Minsker

drone flying over house

Speaking of Militarized Police… No Secret Drones in San Jose

A coalition of advocacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, sent a letter this week to the San Jose City Council demanding that it have the necessary public debate of whether a drone should ever be used in San Jose well before it starts to consider how it could be used.

By Will Matthews

drone in sky

Time for a New Vote on San Jose Police Drones

It’s Time for a Public Debate and a New Vote Over San Jose Police Purchase of Drone

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Stop Sterilization Abuse in California Prisons

This year the California Legislature can take another step toward ending a shameful chapter in the state’s history—coerced sterilization of its most vulnerable residents.

By Phyllida Burlingame

jail cells

San Jose Police Department's Secret Drone Purchase: Where's the Accountability?

The San Jose City Council has approved a police request to acquire a drone – without public debate and with no policy overseeing its use.

By Thomas Mann Miller

police drone flying through the sky

SFPD Agrees to Stop Warrantless Cellphone Searches

The San Francisco Police Department has agreed to stop warrantless searches of cellphones of people who are arrested. This is the result of a settlement announced today in the ACLU-NC's lawsuit against SFPD over this practice.

By Michael T. Risher

Victory! Picture of client Bob Offer-Westort