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

The 1033 program is the vehicle that enables militarized responses against protestors, at the Southern border, and to advance the failed drug war.

By Kanya Bennett

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Trump Deploys His Enforcers to ABQ

All of us should be very concerned about the ramifications of President Trump's deployment of his enforcers to ABQ. 

By Micah McCoy

Trump Deploys his Enforcers to ABQ

The change we need to end police brutality and advance racial justice

Originally published in the Albuquerque Journal.

By Barron Jones

Protesters/Police

Defunding the Police Will Actually Make Us Safer

Policing in this country evolved from slave patrols. It has never been a neutral institution.

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Reimagining the Role of Police

Over the last week, ACLU staff across the country have worked as legal observers; educated protesters about their rights; been arrested, tear-gassed and hit with rubber bullets; challenged curfews; organized town halls; talked to victims of police abuse; donated money to Black Lives Matter, local bail funds and other groups; and strategized about transformational change.The ACLU is busier than ever — let’s not forget this is happening amidst a pandemic and during the Trump administration — but we don’t hesitate to prioritize this work at this time because we have witnessed this reality of police violence all too often.The ACLU’s advocacy against police violence began in the 1920s, shortly after our founding, and has continued for the next 100 years. In 1931, we spearheaded the issuance of a government report, “ Lawlessness in Law Enforcement .” In 1965, in response to the Watts Rebellion , we opened our first storefront office to directly document police abuse. In 1991, following the police beatings of Rodney King, we launched a fight against racial profiling, resulting in litigation and a vibrant nationwide advocacy effort. In 2015, we published “Picking up the Pieces,” a report documenting biased policing in Minneapolis. ACLU reports from New York , Chicago , Newark , Philadelphia , Boston , Detroit , and Nebraska have all documented police departments that reserve their most aggressive enforcement for people of color generally — and Black people in particular.Despite the tireless work done by so many in the ACLU to address police violence in communities of color, there’s a fundamental truth that we must confront: It has not worked. Black people continue to be murdered and brutalized by police with near impunity. More of the same won’t fix this problem.As we look to the future, the ACLU unites behind the profound fight that groups like Movement for Black Lives have been leading: the fight for a completely reimagined vision of the role, presence, and responsibilities of police in America.The fight will be complex, but in practice what we want can be clearly stated: We need to fundamentally change the role of police in our society, and that role has to be smaller, more circumscribed, and less funded with taxpayer dollars. Money saved from reducing the size and scope of police departments must be reinvested into community-based services that are better suited to respond to actual community needs. Doing so will foster improved safety and health outcomes, and present opportunities in Black communities, where decades of underinvestment in everything except police has helped fuel a mass incarceration crisis.

By Anthony Romero

Reimagining the role of police

A Family's Fight

Elisha Lucero had long suffered from persistent and intense migraine headaches, but it wasn’t until her car wreck she learned the true cause.

By Micah McCoy

A family's fght

Elisha Lucero was shot 21 times by BCSO deputies. Watch her sister speak out about that night.

The death of Elisha Lucero at the hands of BCSO deputies in 2019 was both tragic and preventable. Lucero, 28, was killed on July 21, 2019 when Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO) deputies shot her 21 times. BCSO deputies were responding to a 911 call from family members who were concerned about her mental health and safety.

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Danger in the Blind Spots: The Hidden Costs of Predictive Policing

Computer programs that crunch data from arrest reports, court records, even social media accounts, and then spit out predictions about future crimes to stop them before they happen, promise to have policing down to a science. But hidden in the blind spots of these data-crunching algorithms lay numerous civil liberties concerns.

By Katie Hoeppner

The Civil Liberties Concerns With predictive Policing

In Harm's Way

As renowned Native American artist Mateo Romero drove along Old Santa Fe Trail on a hot July day, he couldn’t have imagined that he’d soon be lying face down on the ground with a rifle pointed at his head.

By Katie Hoeppner

Mateo Romero working in his studio.