The Supreme Court's 2026 Term in Review

July 15, 2026
6:00pm - 7:00pm (ET)

Virtual

Virtual via Zoom

Birthright Citizenship Rally at SCOTUS

Summary

The Supreme Court ruled on several major issues this year – from our case defending birthright citizenship to trans rights and voting rights. Join us for a discussion of the court's role and what these decisions mean for Maine and the nation.

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Legal Director Carol Garvan

Carol Garvan

Legal Director

Carol Garvan joined the ACLU of Maine in the spring of 2022. As legal director, Carol leads the organization’s legal efforts tackling broad, systemic issues through impact litigation, something the ACLU is uniquely able to do. Carol is excited to grow the ACLU of Maine’s legal staff and broaden the scope of its legal work. Most recently, the legal department has brought on its first paralegal and first Skadden fellow. The department has expanded upon existing priorities, such as defending the rights to effective assistance of counsel and a speedy trial, the right against self-incrimination, and freedom from unreasonable arrest. New initiatives include defending the rights of unhoused people and expanding rights and protections under the Constitution of Maine as federal courts continue to be hostile to rights under the U.S. Constitution. Before joining the ACLU of Maine, Carol worked at Johnson & Webbert, LLP, where she spent over a decade litigating civil rights and employment cases in Maine, with a focus on systemic discrimination and wage theft. She has worked to vindicate the rights of Mainers who were harassed because of their race and national origin; has represented individuals who were not paid fairly for their work; and has advocated for workers who lost their jobs because they were brave enough to speak out. While in private practice, Carol worked to create collaborations between her firm and nonprofit organizations, including partnering with the ACLU of Maine and Disability Rights Maine, and working with the Southern Maine Workers Center and the Volunteer Lawyers Project to help create a free Workers’ Rights Legal Clinic. Carol has been recognized as a Super Lawyer for the past two years, and before that was recognized as a Super Lawyers Rising Star. Carol earned her Bachelor of Arts from Harvard College and her Juris Doctor from UC Berkeley School of Law. During law school, she served as supervising editor for the California Law Review and editor of the Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice. She clerked for Judge Kermit Lipez of the First Circuit for the United States Court of Appeals and Justice Mark Simons of the California Court of Appeal. Before law school, Carol taught middle school reading in Oakland, California. Carol enjoys gardening, swimming, ice-skating with her kids, hiking with their dogs, and making miniature things.

Chief Counsel Zachary Heiden

Zachary Heiden

Chief Counsel

Zach Heiden is the chief counsel at the ACLU of Maine. Zach was hired in 2004 as the organization’s first staff attorney and he was instrumental in building the ACLU of Maine’s legislative advocacy program before the organization had policy counsel on staff. He has litigated a wide variety of cases to defend the civil rights and civil liberties of people in Maine, including the rights of artists, immigrants, incarcerated people, journalists, pregnant people, protesters, religious minorities, students, and whistleblowers. New England Super Lawyer magazine called him “a hero to beer drinkers everywhere” for his challenge to censorship of alcoholic beverage label illustrations. In 2008, Zach served as a member of the Maine Judicial Branch Indigent Legal Services Commission, which helped restructure the delivery of constitutionally mandated legal representation to people who had been accused of committing a crime and could not afford legal representation. Zach has also served on the Judicial Branch Taskforce on Electronic Court Records Access and the Judicial Branch Advisory Committee on Fees. In 2012, Zach served on the Executive Committee of Mainers United for Marriage, the statewide campaign to win marriage equality. He also serves as an adjunct professor at the University of Maine School of Law, where he teaches constitutional law. Prior to working at the ACLU of Maine, Zach was an associate in the litigation department of the Boston firm Testa, Hurwitz & Thibeault, where he worked on white-collar defense and securities litigation. He began his career after law school clerking for the Honorable Susan Calkins on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. He is the author of Fences and Neighbors, 17 Law and Literature 225 (2005) and Too Low a Price: Waiver and the Right to Counsel, 62 Maine L. Rev. 488 (2010). Zach earned his Bachelor of Arts from Bowdoin College in 1995, his Master of Arts in Modern Irish and British Literature from the University of Florida in 1998, and his Juris Doctor from Boston College Law School in 2002. During law school, he served as managing editor of the BCLS International and Comparative Law Review and founded BCLS’s first chapter of the American Constitution Society. He was awarded the Law School Alumni Association Award at graduation. In his free time, Zach enjoys spending time with his family at the ocean and eating meals in their backyard with neighbors. His wife, Alisha, is a writer and teacher.

Aaron Rosenblum Engagement and Education Coordinator

Aaron Rosenblum

Engagement & Education Coordinator

Aaron joined the ACLU of Maine in 2025. He collaborates within the organization and with external partners to engage our members and the public with the ACLU of Maine’s mission and critical work. Before joining ACLU of Maine, Aaron was an adult services librarian at the Portland Public Library, where he designed inclusive public health and sustainability programs and offered multi-lingual reference services. Prior to that, Aaron worked as a regional programs coordinator for the Louisville Free Public Library, producing adult programming on a wide range of topics across a busy and diverse urban library system. In these and other roles, he has consistently sought opportunities for innovative public engagement and outreach, with a focus on inclusion and accessibility. As an artist, he has performed across North America, produced radio programs and podcasts broadcast or distributed in the US, Europe, and the UK, and has exhibited and led workshops in libraries, schools, and museums in the eastern US. Aaron earned a Master of Library and Information Science degree from McGill University (2010), and a Bachelor of Arts in music and cultural studies from Hampshire College (2003). In his free time, Aaron can be found in the woods on a bicycle, at home creating sound and audiovisual art, or at the end of a leash wherever his dog leads him.

Executive Director Molly Curren Rowles

Molly Curren Rowles

Executive Director

Molly Curren Rowles joined the ACLU of Maine as its executive director in May 2024. Prior to this role, she was executive director of the Jewish Community Alliance of Southern Maine for seven years, where she worked to engage community, build programs, grow capacity, and strengthen organizational development. Molly moved to Maine in 2008 for a Coffin Fellowship at Pine Tree Legal Assistance, where she trained as a litigator in complex family law cases and domestic violence advocacy. She then served as Pine Tree's York County Attorney, providing direct representation in consumer, eviction, public benefits, parental rights, and habitability cases. In 2016, she took on the role of Intake Manager at Pine Tree and helped to build a statewide intake program that connected six offices around the state through training, support, technological resources, and infrastructure. As a child growing up “off the grid” on a small family farm in rural New Hampshire, Curren Rowles developed a deep connection to the natural world and a profound appreciation of the Bill of Rights. She is honored to serve the ACLU of Maine as it addresses some of the most contested and critical civil rights and civil liberties issues we face – from strengthening our democracy and supporting the rule of law, to preserving bodily autonomy and holding government accountable. Curren Rowles is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Smith College, from which she earned her B.A. in Religion and Biblical Literature. She earned her J.D. from Cornell Law School with a concentration in public interest law. She serves on the board of the National Digital Equity Center and is a member of the Maine Artificial Intelligence Task Force. She lives in Portland with her husband, three children, two cats, one dog, and five chickens.