12 Latinx/e Changemakers from Maryland. Background is purple. The image has a silhouette of Maryland and has colorful flowers in the left bottom and upper right corners.

12 Latinx/e Changemakers from Maryland

This Latinx/e Heritage Month Hear About these Past and Present Changemakers

By Neydin Milián

Latest Event


Party for a Purpose: ACLU Maryland New Year Happy Hour

You're invited.

The ACLU of Maryland board of directors is hosting a celebration to honor the work ACLU-MD achieved in 2025 and how we plan to carry these successes into 2026. Join us for a fun evening of laughs, libations, and legislative action.

Mark your calendars for Tuesday, January 6, 5 – 8 p.m., at Waverly Brewing Company.

Party for a Purpose is your opportunity to chat with local activists and ACLU-MD board members, supporters, and staffers, as we all take a break before we tackle the 2026 legislative session together – and have some fun at the same time!

Tickets are $10 each and will get you admission to the happy hour. (Drinks must be purchased separately at Waverly Brewing Company.)

This is an exclusive event, but we've already added you to the VIP list. All you need to do now, like we always do in Maryland, is show up.

Click here to grab your ticket.

We'll see you there!

Party for a Purpose fundraiser

More from the Press


Placeholder image

Stay informed on civil rights issues. Discover our latest actions and updates in the Press Release section.

It Was a Woman Who Founded The ACLU Of Maryland

This Women's History Month, we remember that it was a woman who founded the ACLU of Maryland: Elisabeth Gilman, daughter of the first president of Johns Hopkins University. In 1921 she formed The Maryland Civil Liberties Committee. 

By Meredith Curtis Goode

Elisabeth Gilman

Baltimore City Cannot Evade Responsibility For The Gun Trace Task Force

When Baltimore City’s chief lawyer Andre Davis reaffirmed several weeks ago that the City would not always agree to pay punitive damages judgments awarded against Baltimore Police Officers who intentionally and flagrantly abuse their authority, many people in Baltimore, including us at the ACLU of Maryland, cheered.  The hope was that holding officers personally accountable for paying those (very rare) punitive damages would help deter that kind of egregious misconduct.  So when the City announced after the verdict in the Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF) trial that it would not pay any damages awarded against the officers who plead or were found guilty, it is not surprising that some people also saw that as a step forward for individual police accountability.  But it isn’t.  Instead, it is a transparent attempt to again shift the cost of the BPD’s own repeated and systemic failures onto the people who have been victimized.

By David Rocah

Placeholder image

ACLU Welcomes Sergio España, First-Ever Director Of Engagement And Mobilization

After the 2016 election, the ACLU of Maryland realized that we were in for the fight of our lives to protect the civil liberties we hold dear. However, we also received an enormous wave of support. Thousands of Marylanders understood that our rights and liberties were at risk and felt the need to be educated, get involved, and take action.

By Meredith Curtis Goode, Sergio España

Sergio España

Is Jeff Sessions Justice Department Trying to Kill Police Reform in Baltimore?

UPDATE: As this blog post was being sent to press, the court denied the Justice Department's request to delay Thursday's hearing. The court said, "The Government's motion is untimely. To postpone the public hearing at the eleventh hour would be to unduly burden and inconvenience the Court, the other

Placeholder image

Rallies, marches and protests happening in DC and Maryland

With the inauguration of Donald Trump as president of the United States, many people are looking for ways to speak out in support of civil rights and liberties.

protesters_large.jpg

ACLU Education Reform Project Releases Legislative Priorities for the Maryland General Assembly of 2017

Ensure Full and Adequate Funding of Public Education – The ACLU of Maryland’s (ACLU-MD) Education Reform Project will fight to protect education funding and strengthen the education funding formula.

By Bebe Verdery, Frank Patinella, Kimberly Humphrey, Esq., Justin Nalley

Placeholder image

Baltimore Police Secretly Running Aerial Mass-Surveillance Eye in the Sky

Bloomberg Businessweek reported late Tuesday that the Baltimore police have been subjecting that city to a vast and powerful aerial surveillance system since January, without telling, let alone asking, the public that they serve. This is a big deal.

Placeholder image

Because Incarcerated People Matter: ACLU-MD Concerns with the 2020 Census Proposal

By Michael Abrams

Placeholder image

OpEd: Building a more equitable Port Covington

By Barbara Samuels, Attorney Managing ACLU of Maryland's Fair Housing Advocacy"We will build it together"' is the Port Covington claim. Indeed, with

By Barbara Samuels

Placeholder image