Chicago Police are conducting DUI checkpoints primarily in Black and Latino neighborhoods, the Chicago Tribune reports. This increased police activity in minority neighborhoods is occurring even despite data showing that the neighborhoods targeted are not neighborhoods with a high number of DUI incidents. The ACLU of Illinois has monitored and analyzed traffic stop data from law enforcement agencies throughout the state for over a decade. Each year, traffic stop data show persistent patterns of racial disparity in the number and nature of stops by Chicago Police, which include DUI checkpoints. The Chicago Tribune spoke with ACLU of Illinois Senior Staff Attorney Adam Schwartz:

"Are decisions about where to put DUI checkpoints part of a larger context of policing in a big city?" Schwartz said. "The city really needs to explain itself."

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Friday, September 11, 2015 - 4:15pm

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Fighting for children & people with disabilities during budget impasse

The state of Illinois continues to operate without a budget, owing to politics in Springfield. But that doesn’t mean our clients – who have been the victims of bad behavior by the State in the past – should suffer anew. The ACLU has been busy in federal court working to guarantee that children under the care of the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) and people with developmental disabilities continue to receive promised services as the political discussion continues. We are able to take this action because of successful litigation (and ongoing consent decrees) in a number of cases.

In one case involving services for people with developmental disabilities (Ligas v. Norwood), we and our fellow advocates actually had to threaten the state with contempt for failing to make promised payments. Without adequate funding, people might have been left without the care of their providers who help many of them eat, get dressed, and take critical daily medication. Other clients with developmental disabilities may be forced to move from their familiar homes into inappropriate living situations. These services are essential to their survival.

We also have been working to keep programs funded for children who are under the care of the DCFS (in the base B.H. v. Sheldon). Without a funded program, children under DCFS’ care would suffer immediate harm; many would be forced into unsafe living conditions, including, in some cases, homelessness. Without timely payments to DCFS, its caregivers are unable to perform their jobs to ensure the safety and well-being of the children placed in DCFS custody. The disruption of these services exacerbates the traumas many of these children already have endured.

These situations have captured the media’s attention – and the attention of policymakers. On Tuesday, ACLU of Illinois Associate Legal Director Ben Wolf testified before a Senate committee about the urgency of the situation stating that, without state action, many children in DCFS custody may be left out in the street.

We will not relent until our most vulnerable are cared for. We will update you on this situation as it develops.


 

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Friday, September 11, 2015 - 10:00am

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The International Business Times spoke with ACLU of Illinois' Legislative Director Mary Dixon about privacy concerns over biometrics – facial recognition technology used by applications including Facebook. Biometrics track unique human characteristics as a way to identify a specific individual. Facebook uses biometrics to automatically suggest specific people to tag in photos uploaded by its users. In 2008, the ACLU of Illinois lobbied to pass the Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) which created important regulations on the use of biometric information including guidelines for required consent and prohibiting the sale of biometric data for profit. Because the technological landscape has shifted since 2008, privacy advocates are concerned that BIPA does not have the legal legs necessary to win against Facebook in court. Dixon says:

“I think we were ahead of the curve,” said Mary Dixon, legislative director for the ACLU of Illinois, which advanced the initiative. “I think it’d be hard to pass similar initiatives now given the intense lobby against some of the protections we were able to advance.”

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Date

Friday, September 4, 2015 - 11:00am

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