Help Me Fight for Accurate Sex Education

Hi, my name is Ngan. I’m a tenth grader at Oakland Technical High School, and I’m a sex education activist.

By Ngan Ly

Ngan Ly

Victory for Privacy Rights in California

It was a really good week in California for privacy rights. The legislature passed the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act (CalECPA SB 178) with strong bipartisan support. The bill is now on Gov. Brown’s desk, and he needs to hear from all of us that it’s time to update privacy law for the modern digital world and sign CalECPA into law.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Person using cellphone

California is Poised to Issue a License to Discriminate – Literally

SB 249 would allow the DMV to issue driver’s licenses that include a tiny RFID chip that broadcasts your personally identifying information.

By Becca Cramer-Mowder

A woman looks in her car's rear-view mirror as police lights flash in the background. She is being pulled over.

#LongHairDontCare... Unless You Live in Clovis

By Abre' Conner

William Pleasant, smiling

Legislating for Police Reform and Black Lives in California

Since Michael Brown’s death, unarmed black men have been killed by law enforcement at alarmingly disproportionate rates. Specifically, reports indicate that black men account for 40% of 60 unarmed deaths at the hands of police this year, and are seven times more likely than white men to be shot to death by police while unarmed. At the state level, California holds the ominous record for the highest number of civilian deaths at the hands of law enforcement this year, currently totaling 129.

By Chauncee Smith

Photo from the Sep 2 day of action in Sacramento

California Voters Want More Police Transparency

Much of the recent outcry over policing reflects the concern that when cops violate the law, or shoot someone, the public doesn’t get the full story.

By Peter Bibring

policeman looking at body cam footage

Voters Agree: It’s Time to End “Theft by Cop”

Imagine you’re on your way to buy a used car and a police officer pulls you over. After asking you a few questions, the officer asks to search your car. Knowing you’ve done nothing wrong, you agree. The next thing you know, the officer is telling you that he’s suspicious that you have $2,500 in cash – and he takes it. You explain that you’re on your way to buy a car. He doesn’t believe you and tells you that if you want your cash back, you’ll have to fight for it in court.

By Margaret Dooley-Sammuli

lot full of cars

ACLU Suit Shows the DOJ Gathered Location Data Without Probable Cause

After three years of litigation, we’ve finally settled a portion of one of our long-running Freedom of Information Act suits against the federal government for information about its location tracking practices.  A person’s digital location information reveals detailed, private information that the government should only be able to get through a warrant based on probable cause.  As part of this settlement, the government provided us with information about the types of court orders it obtains to get location information. 

By Linda Lye

digitally created aerial map of a city with location markers

Catholic Hospital Caves Under Threat of Lawsuit and Approves Woman’s Procedure

A Catholic-affiliated hospital will now perform a common reproductive healthcare procedure after the ACLU threatened to sue.

By Elizabeth Gill

Rachel Miller, ACLU client