For Some Families Fleeing Violence, a Shot at a Fair Shake

When I met Milagro* and her toddlers, they were facing imminent deportation to Honduras – a near certain death sentence in light of the extreme violence they would face there. But now they have hope.

By Daniel Galindo

immigrants' rights

Cops Complain about Being Tracked on Waze: “Do as We Say, Not as We Do”

Do you have the right to tell others that you saw an on duty cop in public? According to law enforcement in two Associated Press articles this week, the answer is “No.”

Waze screenshot

Hope and Resilience for Transgender People: Monica Jones Victory

It seems basic enough to ask that one be treated like a human being – that a person’s dignity be honored in life and death. But tragically for too many transgender people that is still a far off dream.

By Chase Strangio

Monica Jones

On Women's Health, the House Trades One Bad Idea for Another

Watching Congress' actions toward women last week might leave you confused about what year it is. Instead of advancing a single policy designed to help women, the U.S. House of Representatives has chosen to attack women's health any way it can.

By Georgeanne M. Usova

Keep abortion safe, legal, and accessible.

The House's #TBT: Roll Backs on Women's Health

Today marks the 42nd anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade. Instead of honoring that legacy of support for women, the U.S. House of Representatives is planning a throwback Thursday, marking the occasion by rolling back women's health with a vote on a federal abortion ban.

By Georgeanne M. Usova

Keep abortion safe, legal, and accessible.

On the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Let’s Talk About Women

42 years after Roe v. Wade, abortion opponents wave around pictures of fetuses floating through space in bubbles. Erased from these images are the pregnant women who actually carry fetuses. Let's put women back into the picture.

By Maggie Crosby

Maggie Crosby, ACLU of Northern California

An Alabama Porch Lesson: Sober Celebration on MLK Day

When I moved into a sleepy Southern home in Montgomery, Alabama, that was so redolent with history, I imagined it to be the perfect place for inspiration. But I found living in a house where key civil rights leaders had once gathered to be far more sobering than inspiring.

By Nayna Gupta

Nayna Gupta

The End Game is Here for Marriage Equality

This is it – the end game in the longstanding campaign to win the freedom to marry for same-sex couples nationwide is upon us. The U.S. Supreme Court has just announced it will hear freedom-to-marry cases in all four states in the Sixth Circuit- Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee and Michigan. We're thrilled to be co-counsel in the Kentucky and Ohio cases.

By James Esseks

scotus_marriage.jpg

Lawyers for Black Lives Matter

Today we lie down on the steps of the CA Supreme Court to protest the legal system’s failure to hold accountable the officers that killed Mike Brown, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, and too many others.

By Novella Coleman

Novella Coleman