Various photos representing this years legislative session including the statue of liberty, a family, and protesters.

Rising to the Moment: A Breakthrough 30‑Day Session for Civil Liberties

This year's legislative session saw ACLU of New Mexico staff, community partners, advocates, and legislative champions showed up ready to work, and ready to lead with courage.

Latest Press Release


CoreCivic Pays Settlement to Estate of 23-Year-Old Asylum Seeker Who Died in Torrance County Detention Facility

The case addressed the TCDF’s systemic failures in its mental health care and CoreCivic’s extreme negligence, which resulted in Kesley Vial’s tragic and preventable death.
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Stay informed on civil rights issues. Discover our latest actions and updates in the Press Release section.

Two signs that read "We build this country together" and "our families have no borders"

A New Phase in Civil Liberties Advocacy: Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going

For decades, the ACLU of New Mexico has worked alongside communities to defend civil liberties and expand the promise of the constitution. Today, with fundamental freedoms under intensifying attack and the stakes for our democracy higher than ever, that work has never been more urgent.
A house with ristras hanging on the porch in New Mexico.

The 2026 Legislative Session: Creating A Firewall for Freedom in New Mexico

As we approach the 2026 legislative session, our nation is facing unprecedented threats to our fundamental freedoms. But we aren’t powerless against these attacks.
An image showing the group of panelists at the Rethinking Public Safety town hall in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Rethinking Public Safety Town Hall

The ACLU of New Mexico and the All Safe New Mexico Coalition came together on January 15 for a powerful “Rethinking Public Safety” Town Hall.

NMSU Coach Sued for Religious Discrimination

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 28, 2006 CONTACT: Whitney Potter (505) 266 5915 ext. 1003, Cell (505) 507 9898 or Joleen Youngers (505) 541-8000, Cell (505) 496-7422 LAS CRUCES, NM--Three Muslim athletes have accused New Mexico State University head football coach Hal Mumme of discharging them from the NMSU football team in 2005 because of their religious beliefs.  Mu'Ammar Ali played on athletic scholarship for the team for 3 consecutive seasons, and Anthony and Vincent Thompson joined the team on red-shirt status in 2004.  Today the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New Mexico sued Mumme, NMSU president William Flores, and the NMSU board of regents for religious discrimination and violations of the athletes’ right to freely exercise their religion. “Universities are supposed to be places of evolved thinking and reason, not of base intolerance and bigotry” said ACLU executive director Peter Simonson.  “They are supposed to rise above the knee-jerk prejudices that sometimes afflict our society.  In this case, the university failed its purpose and a coach indulged in those prejudices to assert his own religious preferences over the players and the team.” When Mumme took over the NMSU program in spring, 2005, he established a practice of having players lead the Lord’s Prayer after each practice and before each game.  Ali and the Thompsons claim that the practice made them feel like outcasts and caused them to pray separately from the other players. Not long after Mumme learned that Ali and Thompson were Muslim, he prohibited the Thompsons from attending the spring 2005 training camp and questioned Ali about his attitudes towards Al-Qaeda. The Thompsons were discharged on September 2, 2005 allegedly because they moved their belongings to an unapproved locker and were labeled “troublemakers.” On October 9, 2005, Mumme left Ali a message on his home answering machine that his jersey was being pulled and that he was discharged from the NMSU football team. Simonson said, “Being coach doesn’t give someone the right to make a football team into a religious brotherhood.  University coaches are tax-paid role models.  The public has a right to expect that they are going to model behaviors that we endorse as a society.  Religious intolerance is not one of those behaviors.” Plaintiffs seek compensatory and punitive damages.  Attorneys for the ACLU are Joleen Youngers and ACLU Staff Attorney George Bach. ###

By Micah McCoy

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