February 14, 2025, would have been Justice Louis Sconik’s 102nd birthday. For many years, he was the only ACLU volunteer lawyer in Maine. In 1968, Lou, Orlando Delogu, and a group of committed activists formed the Maine Civil Liberties Union, now the ACLU of Maine.

Happy birthday to our late co-founder and Maine Supreme Court Justice, Louis Scolnik.

For many decades, the litigation work of the MCLU was carried out by volunteer attorneys who would meet each month to divide up the requests for legal assistance. In 2004, the MCLU hired me as the organization’s first staff attorney, and Lou was one of the first people to reach out. He told me how excited he was about this new development and what it would mean for the people of Maine. And, he told me about how far the organization had come since its founding.

We now have seven lawyers on our staff of fifteen people, including our executive director, Molly Curren Rowles. We are in the legislature every week. We are building out a new community engagement and education program. We have dedicated communications, development, and operations staff. We have a class action lawsuit against the state over inadequate public defense services. And just this week — Lou’s birthday week — we were a part of the team that sued the president over his unconstitutional attack on birthright citizenship (and we won).

All that the ACLU of Maine can accomplish today is because of what Lou Scolnik and a small group of activists started 57 years ago. Over the years, when Lou would hear about something we were doing or read about our work in the newspaper, he would call me up and want to know all about it: who were our clients, what were we trying to accomplish, did we think we might prevail. And after I shared everything, he would say, “That’s terrific!”

I’m now the longest-serving staff member of the ACLU of Maine, so I get to be the one to tell my younger colleagues about how far we’ve come as an organization, and how terrific it is that we can accomplish so much. And, when I do, I hear Lou’s voice in my head. May his memory be forever a blessing.


Read our remembrance of Justice Scolnik following his passing on October 10, 2024, at age 101.

Date

Friday, February 14, 2025 - 2:00pm

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Justice Louis Scolnik Playing Saxophone

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Happy birthday to our late co-founder and Maine Supreme Court Justice, Louis Scolnik.

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The Fourteenth Amendment is clear: if you are born in the U.S., you are a U.S. citizen. Trump's executive order would strip certain babies born in the U.S. of their citizenship, violate the plain language of the 14th Amendment, put newborns in harm’s way, and flout fundamental American values.

Yesterday, our legal and communications teams traveled to Concord, New Hampshire, to appear in federal court to block the Trump administration's blatantly unconstitutional attempt to end birthright citizenship – and we won. The judge blocked enforcement immediately.

Yesterday's ruling is the latest rebuke of President Trump's unconstitutional bid to end birthright citizenship. Federal courts in Seattle and Maryland have also rejected Trump's executive order since it was signed on January 20. Judges across the country agree that the Constitution's 14th Amendment is clear: if you are born in the U.S., you are a U.S. citizen.

While we're grateful that the court has blocked this executive order, our work is far from over. We will keep fighting until this order is stopped for good.

The national ACLU and its affiliates have filed seven lawsuits against the Trump administration since January 20, and we will continue to fight unconstitutional executive orders attempting to fast-track deportations without due process, restrict gender-affirming care, shut down asylum at the border, and more.

As always, we thank you for your support that makes this work possible. To learn more about yesterday's ruling, you can read the judge's order and more about the case here.

Date

Tuesday, February 11, 2025 - 2:45pm

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ACLU attorneys answering press questions outside of courthouse.

Cody Wofsy, deputy director of the ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project, led oral arguments before the court and later addressed reporters outside, February 10, 2025. Credit: ACLU of Maine.

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A graphic featuring Trump and imagery pertaining to immigration.

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Immigrants' Rights

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Within hours of Donald Trump signing an order to end birthright citizenship, we sued. This week, we won arguments to block his illegal order as our case proceeds.

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