Prisoners' Rights

The ACLU established its National Prison Project in 1972 and is the only national litigation program on behalf of prisoners. The ACLU continues to fight unconstitutional conditions and the "lock 'em up" mentality that prevails in the legislatures. The action on behalf of prisoners’ rights include addressing conditions of confinement, immigrant detention, lack of physical and mental health care, over-incarceration (including skyrocketing incarceration rates, the impact of truth-in-sentencing and racial disparities), restriction of many constitutional rights (including freedom of religion), and the needs of women in prison.

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One Step Closer to Fixing Inadequate Care at WI Women’s Prison

A federal judge denied a request by Wisconsin state officials to dismiss a class action lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Wisconsin and the law firm of Jenner & Block charging that grossly deficient health care and mental health treatment jeopardizes the lives of women prisoners at a state prison.

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Medical Marijuana Act Introduced in Wisconsin Legislature

The American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin joined Representative Mark Pocan, Senator Jon Erpenbach, patients and advocates in a press conference for the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act (AB 554 and SB 368), a popular and common sense measure to reform laws on the medical use of marijuana.

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ACLU of WI Statement: Denying H1N1 Vaccines to Prisoners Would Harm Public Health

On October 30, 2009 the ACLU of Wisconsin’s executive director Christopher Ahmuty released the following statement in response to media stories and a media release from State Representative Brett Davis (R-Oregon) encouraging state health officials to put the health of prisoners, correctional officers and their communities in jeopardy by denying H1N1 vaccine to prisoners including pregnant women inmates:

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