ACLU of MAINE In the News

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Starstruck by Mary Beth Tinker - A True Role Model for Activists

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From the Field at the Board of Corrections Meeting - Understanding the Importance of Citizen Oversight

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Supreme Court Ruling Yesterday -- Doctors and Prisoner Death

Francisco Castaneda was a Salvadoran who died in February 2008 at the age of 36 after he was denied a biopsy for a lesion that developed on his penis while he was detained at an immigration detention facility in San Diego, CA.  Yesterday, the Supreme Court ruled that Mr. Castaneda's estate may not sue the government physician who admitted in sworn testimony that she knew a biopsy was the only way to ascertain if Mr. Castaneda had cancer, and yet she did not arrange for a biopsy to happen.  Mr. Castaneda is one of more than 100 immigrants who have died in United States detention.  (The full ACLU press release is below.) On any given day, there are thousands of immigrants in detention here in the United States. In Maine, immigrant detainees are held at the Cumberland County Jail.  The latest court ruling appears to absolve doctors of the legal obligation to provide full medical care for those detainees, but it certainly does not absolve them of the moral and ethical obligation to treat their patients in the best way they know how. The debate over doctors in the prison system is not over.  Here in Maine, the Portland Phoenix's Lance Tapley wrote a thought-provoking article about doctors' complicit in solitary confinement at the prison.  Just because something is legal doesn't make it moral or right.   Supreme Court Rules Government Doctors Not Individually Liable For Death Of Immigration Detainee -

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Public Opinion May Shift, but the Constitutional Right to Privacy Does Not

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I've Got My Marching Shoes On

Wate

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March For Human Rights: What Happens In Arizona Stops in Arizona

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ACLU Letter Urges President Obama To Reject Targeted Killings Outside Conflict Zones

Reported Program Is Illegal And Unconstitutional FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union today sent a letter to President Barack Obama urging him to reject his administration's reported authorization of a program under which suspects, including American citizens, can be targeted, hunted and killed far away from any battlefield. According to the letter, signed by ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero, the use of lethal force outside of armed conflict zones is strictly limited by international law, and at least in some circumstances, the Constitution, which permit lethal force to be used only as a last resort and only to prevent imminent attacks that a

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Inmates and the Census

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