ACLU Calls on Rhode Island College to Immediately Revise "Hate Speech" Policies

In response to the recently-publicized “discrimination” complaint filed against Rhode Island College Professor Lisa Church, the ACLU has called on RIC President John Nazarian to immediately address the “broader issues and concerns that her case has raised” by revising the college’s policies that prohibit “hate speech.” Professor Church had an administrative hearing last week on charges that she violated a college provision requiring personnel to “create, promote and ensure a positive climate where individuals may learn, teach and work free from discrimination.” The charge arose when she refused to intervene in a private dispute in which racist comments were allegedly made by one parent of a child to another at the college’s Cooperative Preschool, which Church helps to coordinate.

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ACLU Urges Police Departments to Shun "Stun Guns"

The Rhode Island ACLU is urging police departments across the state not to purchase Taser “stun guns,” a controversial weapon that many U.S. law enforcement agencies, including four in Rhode Island, have begun adding to their arsenal.

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ACLU Files Free Speech Suit on Behalf of Rejected Teacher Applicant in Lincoln

The ACLU of Rhode Island today filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Lincoln resident Karen Elias Clavet, who was not hired for an art teaching position in the Lincoln public schools this summer despite the recommendation of an independent hiring committee and the school district superintendent. The lawsuit, filed by ACLU volunteer attorney Jennifer Azevedo, claims that the school committee took no action on her appointment because she has been a sometimes-vocal critic of some school district practices. The suit seeks a court order appointing her to the teaching position and barring the school committee from otherwise retaliating against her for her political activities.

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Court Rules that Trial Can Proceed in ACLU's Racial Profiling Suit Against Scituate Police

A federal judge has rejected efforts by the Scituate Police Department to dismiss a racial profiling lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Rhode Island on behalf of Pawtucket resident Jean Philippe Barros, a person of Cape Verdean descent. As a result, the case can proceed to trial.

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National ACLU Targets CVS in Privacy Campaign; New Report Shows Government Using Businesses for Data

As part of a new anti-surveillance campaign which is designed to defend consumers’ personal privacy rights, the ACLU is asking Rhode Island-based CVS and 20 other leading retail, banking and travel businesses across the country to take a “no-spy pledge” to reject government requests to voluntarily turn over information on customers and their transactions.

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On 25th Anniversary of Court Decision, ACLU Says DMV Still Provides Misinformation About Rights

On the twenty-fifth anniversary of a landmark Rhode Island court decision on women’s rights, which held that married women have the legal right to use their birth name on their driver’s license, the ACLU of Rhode Island charged today that the Division of Motor Vehicles continues to provide misinformation to individuals about this basic right.

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ACLU Files Brief in Support of Sanctioned Attorneys in Cornel Young, Jr. Civil Rights Case

The Rhode Island ACLU today filed a “friend of the court” brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Boston, challenging District Court Judge Mary Lisi’s sanctions on attorneys in the Cornel Young, Jr. civil rights case for allegedly misrepresenting the judge’s position in court papers. The brief, filed by ACLU volunteer attorney Amy R. Tabor, argues that Judge Lisi’s actions “not only violated the due process and First Amendment rights of both the plaintiff and her attorneys, but will, if not reversed, chill and undermine the independent and vigorous advocacy that is an indispensable component of our system of justice.” Last year, the ACLU sought to file a similar brief on these issues before Judge Lisi when she was considering whether to sanction the attorneys, but Judge Lisi denied the ACLU’s request to file the brief.

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ACLU Files Complaint with Justice Department Over Lack of Court Interpreters for Defendants

The ACLU of Rhode Island has filed a complaint with the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division against the state for failing to provide appropriate language interpreter services in criminal court proceedings to Limited English Proficient [LEP] persons. While crediting the Rhode Island judiciary and legislature for taking an important step this year by appropriating funds for the hiring of six Spanish-speaking court interpreters, the complaint alleges that LEP criminal defendants continue to lack the services that federal law requires.

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ACLU, Alleging Free Speech Violations, Sues Coventry Fire District for Third Time

The ACLU of Rhode Island has today filed a federal lawsuit against Coventry Fire District Chief Stanley Mruk and District Auditor Conrad Burns, for violating the free speech rights of four Coventry firefighters at the District’s December 2003 annual financial meeting. This is the third time in two years that the ACLU has sued Mruk. The latest suit, filed by ACLU volunteer attorney Gary Berkowitz, is on behalf of Robert Carlow, James Perry, William Perry, and David Gorman.

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