Showing posts with label ACLU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACLU. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

A.C.L.U. Files Suit Over PA Voter I.D. Law


Public News Service-PA
(05/03/12) HARRISBURG, Pa. - Between 90,000 and 900,000 Pennsylvanians could be shut out from the voting process because they don't have the "right kind" of photo identification under Pennsylvania's voter ID law, according to one argument in a lawsuit being filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

The ACLU claims the law is unconstitutional. Its Pennsylvania legal director, Vic Walczak, says the Constitution mentions nothing about needing a photo ID to vote.

"This is a burden that is going to fall largely on the poor, on the elderly, on students, on the transgender community and on people with disabilities."

Walczak says the law puts an unnecessary burden on Pennsylvanians, who may have limited means to secure identification that would be suitable at the polls.

"We have found many people who have literally been trying for years, sometimes with the assistance of lawyers, and have been unable to get an original birth certificate, which is what you need in order to get this voter ID from the state of Pennsylvania."
The voter ID law also exposes voters to any number of problems on Election Day, Walczak says. If voters arrive at a polling place with an unacceptable form of identification, he says, they'll have only six days - two of them on a weekend - to get ID that will be accepted.

"It will be virtually impossible for a person to get that valid photo ID within those six days, which means all those people who show up at the polls who don't have acceptable ID, their votes will not be counted."

Proponents of the law say it will help curb incidents of voter fraud. State election officials say they get many reports of voter fraud, but say only one case, in Chester County, has been confirmed. Walczak says he has yet to see proof that even a single incident of in-person voter fraud has taken place in Pennsylvania.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Statewide Coalition Condemns Proposed Abortion Ban

The following press release was sent to media throughout Pennsylvania on September 30, 2010 by Pennsylvanians for Choice. Pennsylvanians for Choice is a coalition of pro-choice organizations and their allies whose mission is to protect and enhance reproductive health care for all Pennsylvanians. Member organizations include: Pennsylvania NOW, Inc., the Women’s Law Project, Planned Parenthood Pennsylvania Advocates, the American Civil Liberties Union, WOMEN’S WAY, the Women’s Medical Fund, and CHOICE.

Pittsburgh, PA: Today Pennsylvanians for Choice, a statewide coalition of pro-choice organizations, denounced proposed legislation that would severely restrict access to abortion care in Pennsylvania. Senate Bill 1399, introduced by Senator Don White (R-11) would ban private insurance plans sold in Pennsylvania’s state exchange, created under health care reform, from covering even medically necessary abortion procedures.
“Today, most private insurance plans cover abortion care,” said Susan Frietsche, Senior Staff Attorney at the Women’s Law Project. “Senator White’s proposal would leave women worse off than they were before health care reform began.” Under Senator White’s bill, no abortion plan that contracts with the state exchange would be permitted to cover abortion except in the narrowest circumstances.


With an estimated 80% of private insurance plans currently covering abortion procedures, coalition spokespeople said that a ban of this magnitude would have a devastating effect on Pennsylvania women.


"Aside from having some of the oldest and most stringent abortion laws in the nation, Pennsylvania, like every other state, is bound by the Nelson abortion provision to the federal health care law,” said Sari Stevens, Executive Director of the Harrisburg-based Planned Parenthood Pennsylvania Advocates. Under the Nelson abortion provision, any health insurance plan that contracts with the exchange is required to implement a complex system of segregation to ensure no federal funds are used for abortion coverage - including the collection of two separate payments from the beneficiary, one for abortion coverage and one for all other health care coverage.

“Poll after poll shows that Pennsylvanians are not interested in reopening the debate around abortion. I urge Pennsylvania lawmakers to follow the lead of their constituents and support measures to prevent unintended pregnancy in the first place,” added Stevens. The insurance exchanges, slated to be available for enrollment in 2014, will serve those who do not have access to employer-based health plans including the unemployed and small business employees.


The proposed ban would deny insurance plans participating in the exchange from covering abortion care except in cases where the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest, or where the life of the woman is in danger. Frietsche pointed out that “in the Medicaid context, Pennsylvania courts have already ruled that it’s unconstitutional to make rape survivors jump through the kind of insulting and burdensome hoops this bill would create.” The bill would require rape survivors to “personally” report the crime and identify the assailant, if known, within 72 hours in order for their health insurance to cover an abortion procedure.


“The White bill is a throwback to the days when society blamed rape victims for somehow being responsible for the violence that was done to them,” Frietsche commented. “Pennsylvania lawmakers really should have moved beyond these gender stereotypes by now.”


“Instead of denying Pennsylvania women access to fundamental reproductive health care services, politicians should be working to protect and advance women’s health,” concluded Rebecca Foley of the Philadelphia-based nonprofit WOMEN’S WAY. “This proposed ban will leave many Pennsylvania women without coverage for safe, legal, and critical care.”

Thursday, May 20, 2010

ACLU Representing Critics of Corbett in Twittergate

The following is a news release from the ACLU of PA:

ACLU Representing Anonymous Twitter Critics of Pennsylvania State Attorney General And Gubernatorial Candidate Tom Corbett

Grand Jury Issued Subpoena To Twitter Demanding Twitter Users’ Identities

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 20, 2010

Contact: Sara Mullen, ACLU of Pennsylvania, 215-219-8359

HARRISBURG - The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania announced today that it is representing two anonymous Twitter users who have criticized State Attorney General Tom Corbett on a social networking site. Corbett’s office asked a grand jury to issue a subpoena earlier this month to Twitter demanding the identities of his critics.

“Any subpoena seeking to unmask the identity of anonymous critics raises the specter of political retaliation,” said Witold Walczak, legal director for the ACLU of Pennsylvania and one of the lawyers representing the Twitter users. “It’s a prized American right to criticize government officials, and to do so anonymously.”

The subpoena seeks the subscriber information of two Twitter accounts, bfbarbie and CasablancaPA. The subpoena, which asks for records to be turned over by Friday, May 14, was issued by the attorney general’s statewide investigating grand jury on May 6.

Twitter has advised the ACLU that they have not disclosed the account holders' identity, after receiving an objection from a user to the production of subscriber information. It is Twitter's policy to delay production in such cases to provide the user an opportunity to assert his or her rights.

A news account earlier today reported that the Attorney General’s Office appeared to justify the subpoena by claiming that they needed to know the identities of the Twitter users because they suspected that it was a former legislative aide, Brett Cott, who had been convicted in the Bonusgate case and who was using the blog to “attack and malign the investigative and prosecutorial process, which resulted in his conviction.” If true, they argued, this would justify imposing a harsher sentence. The ACLU questions whether seeking evidence in aid of a sentencing proceeding is an appropriate use of the grand jury system.

“The ACLU’s concerns are that using the grand jury process in aid of seeking evidence for sentencing is improper and that using the court to unmask political critics is unconstitutional retaliation that violates the First Amendment,” said Walczak.

The ACLU’s lawyers have entered discussions with the AG’s Office, asking them to withdraw the subpoenas. If the AG’s Office refuses, the ACLU expects to file a motion to quash the subpoenas.

"For a candidate who is campaigning on his desire to protect the privacy of Pennsylvanians who are affected by the new health care bill, Attorney General Corbett shows a disturbing lack of interest in the privacy of critics who, in the best tradition of American democracy, have chosen to criticize his conduct of office anonymously,” said Paul Alan Levy, a lawyer with the Public Citizen Litigation Group, which is working with the ACLU on the matter.

In addition to Walczak and Levy, also representing the anonymous Twitter users are Barbara Zemlock, a lawyer with Post Schell in Harrisburg, and Mark Sheppard, an attorney in the Philadelphia office of Montgomery McCracken, Walker and Rhoads, LLP.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

ACLU-PA Releases Report Card on Civil Liberties in Pennsylvania

New Open Records Law a Rare Bright Spot on Civil Liberties Landscape

Philadelphia – In honor of Constitution Day, September 17, the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania is releasing a report card on the state of civil liberties in the commonwealth. Pennsylvania earned an overall grade of “C-”, with its lowest marks in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights, immigrants’ rights, and the death penalty. Pennsylvania’s new Right to Know Law earned the state its highest grade – a “B”.

“The Constitution was born in Pennsylvania, but the commonwealth is lagging behind in advancing civil rights and freedom,” said Andy Hoover, ACLU-PA Legislative Director. “Many of our neighboring states are moving forward on issues like lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender equality, welcoming immigrants, and giving up on the death penalty. Pennsylvania can and should do better.”

The report paints a troubling picture of LGBT rights in Pennsylvania, where it is still legal in most of the state to fire someone based on his or her sexual orientation. Almost all of Pennsylvania’s neighboring states provide legal protections for their LGBT residents.

One of the few bright spots on the civil liberties landscape in Pennsylvania is the Right to Know Law, which easily won the “most improved” subject award. The new Right to Know Law took effect in January 2009 and replaced what had been one of the worst open records laws in the country.

Other issues receiving grades were reproductive rights (“C”) and voting rights (“B-”).

A copy of the report card and the accompanying report is available at: http://www.aclupa.org/downloads/ConstitutionDayreport.pdf

Contact: Sara Mullen, ACLU of Pennsylvania, 215-592-1513 x122

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

ACLU of PA State Conference, April 18

Join us for the 2009 ACLU of Pennsylvania State Conference!  

We the People: Working Together to Restore Civil Liberties

 

Saturday, April 18th

8:30 am - 4:30 pm

Harrisburg/Hershey Holiday Inn Conference Center

604 Station Road, Grantville 17028

 

Now, more than ever, we civil libertarians must roll up our sleeves. In the weeks, months and years ahead, there is much work to be done. We have an extraordinary opportunity to make this country and this state a freer, fairer place. Come learn what you can do to advance civil liberties in Pennsylvania!

 

Conference Highlights

 


Keynote: Ending the War on Drugs

with Officer Howard J. Wooldridge (retired), Founding Member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), a drug-policy-reform organization consisting of current and former law enforcement officers

 

Plenary: A Civil Libertarian’s Perspective on Obama’s First 100 Days

with Larry Frankel, State Legislative Counsel for the Washington Legislative Office, National ACLU

 

Workshops


  • An Activist Guide to Slowing the Growth of the Prison Industrial Complex
  • Reproductive Rights 101: Everything Your Legislator Needs to Know but Is Afraid to Ask  
  • Challenging Police Misconduct: Community Responses 
  • The ADAAA: Undoing the Damage to the Major Civil Rights Act for People with Disabilities
  • Freedom to Work: Ending LGBT Discrimination in Pennsylvania
  • Dismantling the School-to-Prison Pipeline 

 

Additional activities on Friday, April 17


We also invite you to attend a pre-conference reception at 6 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. on April 17 at the conference hotel.

 

After-dinner entertainment provided by singer/songwriter Jefferson Pepper. Registration for dinner and reception required.  Concert is free and does not require registration. 

 

Registration Information


Register online at: www.aclupa.org/conference

Member registration: $65
Non-member registration: $85 (includes a free one-year ACLU membership)
Student/low-income registration: $20 

Reception on April 17: Free
Dinner on April 17: $35

Hotel Information


Rooms are available at the conference hotel, the Holiday Inn Harrisburg/Hershey, for the conference rate of $99 plus tax. Reservations can be made by calling (717) 469-0661. Please mention the ACLU rate when making reservation. Conference rate is good until 3/31/2009.

Questions?


Contact us at 215-592-1513 x122 or aclupa@aclupa.org .