Each week we will provide you with a rundown of top news stories and must-read articles.

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Justice for Rosa Maria

Rosa Maria, a 10-year old undocumented girl with cerebral palsy, has been detained by immigration officers and may face deportation. Last week, Rosa Maria received emergency surgery while armed immigration agents waited outside to take her into custody. The ACLU sued the government, arguing that the immigration officers illegally detailed Rosa Maria.

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Fighting for disability rights and immigration rights

Many of the undocumented immigrants detained in the United States have mental or physical disabilities. Rosa Maria’s treatment is a reminder that fighting for disability rights also means fighting for immigrant rights.

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Puerto Rico still in need

Six weeks after Hurricane Maria became the second major hurricane to pummel Puerto Rico, the island is still in desperate need of aid. This week, the United Nations raised concerns over the United States slow response to the disaster as much of the island is without potable water or electricity. 

John Kelly concocts dangerous account of Civil War

This week, Donald Trump’s Chief of Staff, John Kelly, claimed that the Civil War was caused by a “lack of ability to compromise”. The Civil War was caused by slavery and there should have been no compromise on slavery. John Kelly’s claims were inaccurate and ignorant.

THE ACLU’S TAKE

Date

Friday, November 3, 2017 - 11:30am

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Immigrants' Rights Racial Justice

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Each week we will provide you with a rundown of top news stories and must-read articles.

Headlines

Heartless, inhumane deportations

The Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policies led to another cruel circumstance this week. A 10-year old undocumented immigrant with cerebral palsy was stopped at a checkpoint on the way to the hospital. Immigration officers followed the ambulance to the hospital and waited as she received emergency surgery. Now, the young girl may be deported.

Jane Doe’s abortion case resolved, fight continues

This week, a judge ordered that the government must allow Jane Doe to receive an abortion. Jane Doe is an undocumented minor that the government has been unconstitutionally preventing from getting an abortion. The case is illustrative of broader attacks on immigrant and reproductive rights.

THE ACLU’S TAKE

DHHS failing to respond to worrisome audit

In August, a federal report revealed that the Maine DHHS failed to sufficiently investigate the deaths of 133 adults with disabilities in recent years. Almost three months later, a lawmaker who serves as the commissioner of the Health and Human Services Committee called DHHS’ response “vague and unsatisfactory.”

New surveillance methods

Emerging police surveillance tactics like facial recognition, drone monitoring, and cell phone tracking are concerning – especially when it is not known what tactics police are using. Police department should be required to tell the public what surveillance methods they are using and what restrictions those methods have. 

Date

Friday, October 27, 2017 - 4:00pm

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JOIN US FOR THIS SPECIAL SCREENING: November 9, doors at 6:30, film at 7:00

An essential documentary, Brett Story’s incisive, investigative and wide-ranging THE PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPES is an examination of the prison and its place – social, economic and psychological – in American society. 

Today, more people are imprisoned in the United States than in any other time or place in history, yet the prison itself has never felt further away or more out of sight. Not only are prisons themselves sited farther than ever from the places where most prisoners come from and where most people live, but journalists, filmmakers and researchers are increasingly denied access to the world inside their walls. The prison appears to most of us only in endless Hollywood depictions and reality television, making incarceration invisible and exceedingly familiar at the same time. When one tries to Google map search the address of a particular penitentiary, it often appears as a vast blank space on the screen. It is as if prisons, and the people in them, have been erased. 

In this extraordinary documentary, filmmaker Brett Story excavates the often-unseen links and connections that prisons – and our system of mass incarceration – have on communities and industries all around us; from a blazing California mountainside where female prisoners fight raging wildfires to a Bronx warehouse that specializes in prison-approved care packages to an Appalachian coal town betting its future on the promise of new prison jobs to the street where Michael Brown was shot in Ferguson (and to the nearby St. Louis County, where African-Americans are still fending off police harassment, but of a different form). 

The Prison in Twelve Landscapes is a sweeping portrait of the prison system, but viewed from the inside-out: through the cinder block walls, the steel gates and razor wires, at the American landscape beyond it. 

Part of the ACLU of Maine's Freedom Side Film Series. Other films in the series include:
September 18 + 20: WHOSE STREETS? with filmmaker Sabaah Folayan
October 18: JACKSON presented with Planned Parenthood of Maine Action Fund
December 13: FROM NOWHERE

Event Date

Thursday, November 9, 2017 - 6:30pm

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Venue

SPACE Gallery

Address

538 Congress St.
Portland, ME 04101
United States

Phone

207.828.5600

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Date

Thursday, November 9, 2017 - 6:30pm

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