Immigrant Vulnerable to COVID-19 Released from ICE Custody at McHenry County Jail

Our client Souleymane Dembele has been released from ICE custody just days after the filing of a lawsuit on his behalf. Souleymane, husband to a lawful resident and father to three U.S. citizen children, suffers from pre-existing medical conditions. He was held by ICE at the McHenry County Jail, where conditions put him at risk of severe illness or death from COVID-19. Last Friday, the ACLU of Illinois, the American Civil Liberties Union, and Faegre Drinker Biddle and Reath LLP filed a lawsuit in a federal district court in Chicago on behalf of Mr. Dembele and another vulnerable immigrant. The lawsuit seeks to enforce these individuals’ due process rights and argues for their immediate release because crowded and unsanitary conditions in the McHenry County Jail place them at significant risk of severe illness or death from COVID-19. Mr. Dembele suffers from medical conditions that are recognized by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to place people at high risk of COVID-19 complications. After the lawsuit was filed, the ACLU was notified by the government that Mr. Dembele would be released. The second man who sued is still detained. “This is a truly great day for Mr. Dembele, his wife and his children – who lived each day in fear that his life was at risk in the McHenry County Jail,” said Nusrat Jahan Choudhury, legal director for the ACLU of Illinois. “On the day we filed this suit for Mr. Dembele, a senior ICE official told members of Congress the agency did not plan to release any more immigrants. ICE clearly is not doing enough to ensure that immigration detention does not amount to a death sentence for vulnerable people. Immigration detention continues to unnecessarily put immigrants, facility staff, and the surrounding community at risk.” Mr. Dembele is under a doctor’s care for hypertension and pre-diabetes.

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New ACLU Report Shows Black Illinois Residents Were Seven Times More Likely to be Arrested for Cannabis Before Legalization

Black residents of Illinois were seven times more likely to be arrested for cannabis possession in Illinois before the State regulated purchase and possession at the beginning of this year. In fact, Illinois had the third highest rate of bias in cannabis arrests in the United States, surpassed only by Montana and Kentucky. The ACLU of Illinois noted these figures today in calling for continued vigilance to assure that remaining enforcement of cannabis in Illinois not carry on this legacy of discrimination. 

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Two Men Vulnerable to COVID-19 Sue ICE and McHenry County Officials for Release

Souleymane Dembele, who has lived and raised his family in the United States for almost a decade, lives in fear for his life while detained on civil immigration charges at the McHenry County Adult Correctional Facility. Mr. Dembele suffers from medical conditions that place him at high risk of serious illness or death from COVID-19. The ACLU of Illinois, the American Civil Liberties Union, and Faegre Drinker Biddle and Reach LLP filed suit today in a federal district court in Chicago on behalf of Mr. Dembele and another vulnerable immigrant against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and McHenry County officials. The suit seeks the immediate, temporary release of the plaintiffs from jail due to the threat to their health and lives posed by conditions promoting the spread of coronavirus.

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ACLU of Illinois Reacts to State Representative Releasing Names of Commuted Prisoners

Yesterday, a state representative released the names of prisoners in Illinois granted commutation recently as part of an ongoing effort to reduce the population of Illinois prisons, which are experiencing outbreaks of the virus which causes COVID-19.  

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COVID - 19 Response

The COVID-19 pandemic creates anxiety and hardship for millions of Americans, and raises a number of urgent issues for the most vulnerable in our state. In response, the ACLU is in contact with state and local government officials to ensure that all actions in response to this crisis are based in science and public health.

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2020 Primary Election Information

Early voting for the 2020 Primary Election in Illinois is underway. From President to local prosecutors, judges and other officials, your vote in this election will have an impact on how civil liberties are protected and advanced in our state.  Mark sure you make a plan and vote. 

ACLU Voter

A Leader In Civil Liberties Steps Away

It was the summer of 1984 when Ben Wolf first laid his briefcase down on a desk in the ACLU’s Chicago office. He came from a large firm to start a new project at the ACLU of Illinois tasked with reforming state institutions.

Ben Wolf Retires

Strengthening Inclusion for Transgender, Nonbinary & Gender Nonconforming Students in Illinois Schools

Recently, the Affirming and Inclusive Schools Task Force delivered its report Strengthening Inclusion in Illinois Schools to Governor Pritzker detailing the procedures that Illinois schools should adopt to support transgender, nonbinary, and gender non-confirming students. For me, it was an honor to serve on this Task Force alongside the diverse group of educators, students, and advocates who worked on the report. The report’s message is simple: schools in Illinois

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Ending Illinois’ Drug War: Legalizing Cannabis is Just the Beginning

Illinois took a historic step in 2019 when Governor Pritzker signed legislation to legalize the sale and possession of cannabis for recreational use by people at least 21 years of age. The new law has rightfully received praise for its focus on equity, including expungement of criminal records for cannabis offenses and earmarking 25% of revenue from cannabis sales for communities experiencing disproportionate rates of violence and concentrated disinvestment. Some champions of the new law have spoken movingly of their desire to “repair the harm” of the “failed war on drugs.”

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