Transgender Birth Certificates

On Thursday May 12th, the ACLU of Kansas submitted opposition testimony to proposed changes to K.A.R. 28-17-20, an administrative policy which relates to the process for making changes to birth certificates.

By Mary B.

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Tell your lawmakers it's time for same-day registration in Kansas - Sign our petition today!

 A bill has been introduced in the House Committee on Elections  that would finally allow Kansans to register to vote the day of the election. This could be a tremendous step forward for voting rights in Kansas, but Kansas lawmakers need to know this is what their constituents want. Email the committee  and make sure to sign up for our email list so we can update you on the bill's progress! 

By Mary B.

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2016 ACLU of Kansas Legislative Priorities

2016 ACLU Legislative Priorities

By Mary B.

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An innocent man spent 16 years in Kansas prisons

Floyd Bledsoe saw his first New Year's Day as a free man this year after spending 16 years behind bars for a crime he didn’t commit. In 2000 he was sentenced to life in prison by a Kansas court for the murder of his 14-year-old sister-in-law. His conviction was based on a web of lies, failure to utilize available DNA testing, and alleged prosecutorial and police misconduct.

By Mary B.

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Kris Kobach files to prosecute three voter fraud cases in Kansas

Months after being granted the unprecedented power of prosecuting "voting crime" in Kansas, Secretary of State Kris Kobach has found 3 cases to pursue, despite prosecutors in both counties having already decided not to prosecute. Kobach is charging Lincoln L. Wilson in Sherman County with a felony for double voting, and Betty and Steven Gaedtke with misdemeanors for unlawful voting and advance voting unlawfully.Executive Director Micah Kubic said Kobach has been “particularly zealous about trying to find something to justify this new law that he got passed, so I’d be really concerned about the merits of the individual cases.” Read the rest of the story in The Wichita Eagle here.

By Mary B.

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ACLUKS Testifies against K.A.R. 7-23-15

Doug Bonney, Legal Director of ACLUKS testifies on Wednesday, September 2nd at the State Capitol against K.A.R. 7-23-15, which would impose a 90 day period during which voter registration applicants would be required to complete all of the voter registration requirements under Kansas law. K.A.R. 7-23-15(b).Read his testimony and news coverage on the hearing below.

By Mary B.

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Kobach says voter registrations without ‘proof of citizenship’ need to go

In the Kansas City Star on August 30th, Kris Kobach proposes throwing out over 30,000 incomplete voter registration applicants due to failure to provide the "proof of citizenship" documents now-required by the Secretary of State's office. The ACLU of Kansas weighed in below."Doug Bonney, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, said election officials have long kept incomplete applications “in suspense,” prior to the new proof-of-citizenship requirements, and there was never a need to clear the records.So why should there be a time limit now that it’s more difficult to register? he asked.“I don’t see any reason to limit it,” Bonney said, “except that with 30,000 now on the list, it’s gotten to be an embarrassment for Kobach.”

By Mary B.

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New ACLU Executive Director visits Hays

During Summer 2015, the ACLU of Kansas is on a statewide tour talking about civil liberties in Kansas today. The tour is called Where Freedom Stands: Civil Liberties in Kansas Today.Recently, Executive Director Micah Kubic went to Hays, KS and was welcomed into an ACLU's member home to speak on the state of civil liberties in Kansas today.“We exist to defend constitutional rights and to protect and strengthen those rights,” he said. “Kansas is on the front line of every single civil liberties battle raging in the U.S.“We have our work cut out for us on all of those issues. But the good news is that we are being pretty successful on all of those issues given a political environment that is not always entirely friendly. Things are going very well. But the fight for our rights is a grinding daily struggle, and nowhere in the country is that more true than right here in Kansas.”Read the entire article at the Hays Daily News from June 20, 2015. 

By Mary B.

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ACLU of Kansas files amicus brief in free speech case

In the fall of 2013, the University of Kansas expelled Navid Yeasin for bad conduct that took place off-campus during the summer of 2013.  As part of the grounds for expulsion, KU considered tweets Yeasin had posted about his ex-girlfriend.  KU also ordered Yeasin not to post anything on social media about his ex-girlfriend. Because KU's restrictions on the content of Yeasin's speech on social media raise serious First Amendment issues, the ACLU of Kansas has filed an amicus brief with the Kansas Court of Appeals in the case challenging the expulsion.ACLU Amicus Brief - Yeasin v. KU  

By Mary B.

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