State budget crisis adds to lawmakers’ push for death penalty repeal

Discussions of Wyoming’s death penalty resurfaced last month when Gov. Mark Gordon told a legislative committee that he was “looking very seriously” at issuing an executive moratorium on the death penalty, noting the roughly $1 million annual cost of keeping it on the books.

Wyoming Capitol Rotunda

The U.S. Postal Service Was Never a Business. Stop Treating it Like One.

Chad Marlow, Senior Policy Counsel, ACLU When

Letter carriers load mail trucks for deliveries at a U.S. Postal Service facility.

2020 Census Frequently Asked Questions

The Census is a brief survey the Census Bureau sends to every household in the country every 10 years.  It is required by the Constitution to count every living person in the United States, regardless of citizenship or immigration status.

2020 Census

Undocumented Youth Won on DACA, but Trump’s a Sore Loser. So What’s Next?

Andrea Flores, Former Deputy Director of Policy, ACLU's Equality Division Afte

"Here to Stay" banner at a rally in favor of DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) is seen in front of the Supreme Court.

Communities Deserve Better Than Bayonets and Grenade Launchers: The Defense 1033 Program Must End Now

Kanya Bennett, Former Senior Legislative Counsel, American Civil Liberties Union Poli

Militarized federal agents deployed by the president to Portland, fire tear gas against protesters

Should We Abolish the Police?

Since the protests decrying the murder of George Floyd began in May, the institution of American policing has taken center stage. Activists are calling for change, and the phrase “defund the police” can be heard in cities across the country. As the concept of slashing police budgets and reinvesting those resources into Black and Brown communities goes increasingly mainstream, a more radical call is also gaining attention: Abolish the Police.On At Liberty this week, attorney, author, researcher, and organizer Andrea Ritchie and senior staff attorney for the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice, Carl Takei, joined us to talk abolition, divestment, and what a world without police might look. “[Abolition is] about recognizing the instinct in all of us to punish people who hurt us, or to seek retribution instead of repair, and to acknowledge that actually in order to create a society that is free from violence, we have to move away from mobilizing the state and giving the state a monopoly on violence to respond to violence,” says Ritchie. “Instead, we need to dig to the root causes of violence and transform those conditions and causes, such that we can all have an opportunity to live in a world free of violence, not just people who are in positions of privilege in the current political, social, economic structure.”

A group of protesters with one holding a sign with the text, "Abolish the Police."

The Fight, an ACLU film

The documentary shows the hard, exhausting work of fighting for civil and human rights.

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Police Reform in Cheyenne: Real Change Starts with Conversation

Weeks of powerful protests highlight the outrage over the enduring and deep-rooted problem of racist policing and structural racism in the United States.

By Libby Skarin

protest

Students, Colleges, and Universities Win Against the Trump Administration’s Latest Anti-Immigrant Attack

Manar Waheed, Senior Legislative and Advocacy Counsel, ACLU

Students walking on a college campus.