A central Kansas police force sparked a firestorm by raiding a newspaper and the publisher’s home

“It seems like one of the most aggressive police raids of a news organization or entity in quite some time,” said Sharon Brett, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, adding that it seemed “quite an alarming abuse of authority.”

eric meyer, marion county record

Rethinking Quindaro: A Kansas ACLU report shines a new light on a 'truly democratic place'

Quindaro in Wyandotte County was once a thriving, multiracial community, inextricably linked to the region’s history before, during and after the Civil War. This week, the ACLU of Kansas is releasing a carefully curated, more than 40-page analysis of the former township.

rethinking quindaro: a Kansas ACLU report shines a new light on a "truly democratic place"

Remembering Quindaro: ACLU of Kansas Shines New Light

The ACLU of Kansas is asking people to study the history of Quindaro to envision a more just and equitable Kansas. Quindaro, the organization argues, is more than a site of historic significance, known mostly as a stop along the Underground Railroad.

Workers handle preservation duties duringa 1980s excavation of the Quindaro site. They are working on the old J.B. Upson Building, which housed a clothing store and served as offices for the Chindowan newspaper. ( Larry Schmits)

COVID Testing in Our Prison Has Been Used to Harm, Not Help

Constant testing did nothing to reduce COVID transmission, but it was very effective at reducing everything else. From a few weeks into the pandemic through the end of 2022, each time one of us tested positive, staff would pack us off to the quarantine unit. We’d be locked in there with a bunch of other people who’d also tested positive, until we tested negative. No TV. No radio. No books. We had the option of making one 20-minute phone call each day, during the same 20-minute window when we had the option of taking a shower. 

filter magazine prison photo july 2023

Legal bills surpass $1 million in defense of voting laws

The cost of defending election laws enacted in 2021 has now surpassed $1 million as the litigation winds its way through the federal and state court system.

sunflower state journal: legal bills surpass $1 million in defense of voting laws

Federal judge upends court order allowing transgender Kansans to alter birth certificates - Kansas Reflector

In wake of the attorney general’s effort to undo the consent order, Kansas ACLU executive director Micah Kubic said Kobach ought to rethink the “sheer indecency of this attempt to weaponize his office’s authority to attack transgender Kansans just trying to live their lives.”

A U.S. District Court judge granted Thursday a request by Attorney General Kris Kobach to modify a 2019 consent agreement resolving a lawsuit by permitting transgender Kansans to amend birth certificates to be consistent with gender. The Kansas Legislatur

Kansas Troopers ‘Waged War on Motorists,’ Federal Judge Finds - The New York Times

When a mundane traffic stop was nearing its end, a state trooper would turn to leave. But after a couple of paces toward the squad car, the trooper would whirl around and go back to the window of the pulled-over driver, hoping to strike up a conversation and find enough reason to scour the car.

Officers used a procedure known as a “two-step,” the court found, in which troopers would return to stopped motorists and try to engage them in voluntary conversation.Credit...George Etheredge for The New York Times

Kansas police tactic allegedly targeting Colorado drivers ruled unconstitutional | Colorado Public Radio

“This is a huge win — for our clients and for anyone else who travels on Kansas highways. We are gratified that the Court saw the ongoing harms of KHP’s unconstitutional practices and stepped in to stop the department’s widespread misconduct,” said Sharon Brett, Legal Director of the ACLU of Kansas.

Vehicles travel in advance of Thanksgiving along I-70 near Lawrence, Kan., Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2020. Orlin Wagner/AP Photo

State troopers searched a Black driver for drugs. He sued and won. - The Washington Post

Kansas trooper Brandon McMillan pulled Bosire over for driving seven miles per hour over the speed limit, according to court documents. What happened next is an example of a policing practice known as the Kansas “two step,” a tactic that a judge ruled unconstitutional this week.

Accessibility statementSkip to main content  Democracy Dies in Darkness Subscribe  kielmanjesse Politics Biden administration The 202s Polling Democracy in America Election 2024 COURTS & LAW Troopers detained a Black man. He exposed their unconstitutional