ACLU reminds Kansans why private prison closed as attempts to reopen begin

“As described in our letter, CoreCivic is plainly unable to run a facility that meets even the bare minimum standards afforded by our Constitution,” said Sharon Brett, Legal Director of the ACLU of Kansas. “CoreCivic demonstrated a consistent and deliberate indifference to mitigating the dangerous and unconstitutional conditions in the Leavenworth facility, as it has elsewhere in the country. The Leavenworth Government should not invite CoreCivic back to once again abuse individuals’ human and civil rights. The constitutional imperatives that CoreCivic is incapable of following remain, and we urge the Commission to reject their bid to get back in business in Kansas.”

corecivic leavenworth detention center human rights violations

Envisioning Safety: Community-Driven Prosecution Reform in Wyandotte County

The reform prosecution movement faces a critical moment. With the recent uptick in violent crime, reform prosecutors face unprecedented attacks and calls for a return to “tough-on-crime” tactics. Those attacks rest on the false belief that criminal legal system reforms endanger public safety. To sustain the movement, reform prosecutors must build the case that their approach will make communities safer, and the Vera Institute of Justice’s (Vera’s) Reshaping Prosecution initiative is well-positioned to help them do so.

Envisioning Safety: Community-Driven Prosecution Reform in Wyandotte County

‘Quindaro, the vision:’ Kansas ACLU report points to historic site as blueprint for future

“It’s about Quindaro the idea,” said McCormick, who has also written columns for Kansas Reflector. “Quindaro the aspiration, Quindaro the vision. We’re talking about a place, as one of our sources in the report said, is maybe the best example of a multiracial democracy, not only in the history of the state, but to his knowledge, maybe anywhere in the country.”

mark mccormick kansas reflector quindaro

After rights violations, KS troopers will need written consent for some car searches

Sharon Brett, legal director for the ACLU of Kansas, said Monday that drivers should not be subjected to different practices based on where they are driving.

kansas highway patrol

Kansas police took Jeremy Sellhorn’s car in 2020 and he can’t get it back. He isn’t alone

Sharon Brett, litigation director with the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, said people often struggle with the court process. Courts are confusing and police can take property without having to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a crime happened.

Kansas police took Jeremy Sellhorn's car in 2020 civil asset forfeiture

Shuttered private jail in Leavenworth could become ICE detention center

The ACLU of Kansas decried the possibility of CoreCivic operating an ICE facility in a news release Wednesday. Sharon Brett, the chapter’s legal director, said the company was “plainly unable to run a facility that meets even the bare minimum of standards afforded by our Constitution.”

CoreCivic's Leavenworth Detention Center, which previously held pre-trial detainees charged with federal crimes could become a detention facility for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. (Allison Kite/Kansas Reflector)

Kansas ACLU seeks strict boundaries to end KHP's unconstitutional vehicle searches - Kansas Reflector

Sharon Brett, legal director of the ACLU in Kansas, said the judge’s proposed remedies illustrated the federal court wouldn’t “tolerate the cowboy mentality of policing that subjects our citizens to conditions of humiliation, degradation, and, in some tragic cases, violence.”

Kansas Highway Patrol Superintendent Erik Smith inherited a lawsuit challenging the agency’s reliance on the “Kansas two-step” to trigger trooper or canine searches of vehicles. A U.S. District Court judge ruled the KHP policy violated constitutional righ

ACLU seeks traffic stop rules for KHP after two step ruling | The Kansas City Star

The American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas is urging a federal judge to impose a severe injunction against the Kansas Highway Patrol to block future violations of drivers’ constitutional rights. Under the rule, troopers would need to receive training and keep detailed records about traffic stops.

Kansas Highway Patrol vehicle in Manhattan, KS (Feb. 25, 2023) The Wichita Eagle.

After scathing ruling, Kansas Highway Patrol argues against rules to prevent rights violations

“If an injunction isn’t issued I think there’s a significant concern that the KHP will continue doing precisely the things that the court found to be unconstitutional,” Brett said.

After scathing ruling, Kansas Highway Patrol argues against rules to prevent rights violations