Summer 2024 issue of Free State Liberties, the newsletter by the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland and the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Maryland.
Want to support our work and receive the newsletter in the mail? Become a member-donor today.
(Newsletter Editor: Meredith Curtis Goode; Writer: Neydin Milián; Designer: Nicole McCann)
Summer 2024 issue of Free State Liberties, the newsletter by the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland and the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Maryland.
Want to support our work and receive the newsletter in the mail? Become a member-donor today.
(Newsletter Editor: Meredith Curtis Goode; Writer: Neydin Milián; Designer: Nicole McCann)
Public Policy
Waiting for Medical Parole Should Not Be a Death Sentence
No one ill enough to be eligible for medical parole should die of illness awaiting a release decision from the Governor. Yet, five people whom the Maryland Parole Board recommended for medical parole died while waiting for the Governor to act.
In 2021, the Maryland General Assembly passed important legislation to make the Maryland Parole Commission the final decider in parole, instead of the Governor. However, medical parole was mistakenly omitted from the bill.
This kind of parole is arguably the most important for the Commission to process thoroughly and act on expeditiously. A six-month waiting period from the Governor can be the difference between dying among family members and friends and dying alone in a prison cell.
Together with our partners, the ACLU of Maryland continues to work to pass this vital change.
Maryland Parole Partnership
Go to our website to watch Maryland Parole Project (MPP) Leader Bobby Stewart talk about “Medical Health & Elders Inside,” the first of our “Life After a Second Chance Series.” Stewart is pictured above with Senior Staff Attorney Sonia Kumar.
Waiting for Medical Parole Should Not Be a Death Sentence
No one ill enough to be eligible for medical parole should die of illness awaiting a release decision from the Governor. Yet, five people whom the Maryland Parole Board recommended for medical parole died while waiting for the Governor to act.
In 2021, the Maryland General Assembly passed important legislation to make the Maryland Parole Commission the final decider in parole, instead of the Governor. However, medical parole was mistakenly omitted from the bill.
This kind of parole is arguably the most important for the Commission to process thoroughly and act on expeditiously. A six-month waiting period from the Governor can be the difference between dying among family members and friends and dying alone in a prison cell.
Together with our partners, the ACLU of Maryland continues to work to pass this vital change.
Maryland Parole Partnership
Go to our website to watch Maryland Parole Project (MPP) Leader Bobby Stewart talk about “Medical Health & Elders Inside,” the first of our “Life After a Second Chance Series.” Stewart is pictured above with Senior Staff Attorney Sonia Kumar.
Voter Empowerment
The ACLU of Maryland’s Election Protection campaign educates voters about their rights, advocates for equitable and accessible voting options, assists residents with questions and concerns, and addresses issues through investigations and legal advocacy.
The ACLU of Maryland’s Election Protection campaign educates voters about their rights, advocates for equitable and accessible voting options, assists residents with questions and concerns, and addresses issues through investigations and legal advocacy.
2024
In the 2024 Maryland General Assembly session, every action alert you signed, every phone call and email you sent to legislators, every meeting or rally you attended to demand better for all Marylanders, made a difference.
Thank you for raising your voice in support of stopping bad bills that would have violated our rights, like legislation to repeal the new law banning stops and searches based solely on the smell of marijuana, or to repeal the Child Interrogation Protection Act. Our priority bill the Second Look Act did not pass, but in its first year, it got much further than expected, with an ever-growing coalition of impacted families and community leaders. And shamefully, the legislature passed HB 814 to throw more 10- to 12-year-old Black children in jail, though we pushed hard for Governor Wes Moore to veto the bill.
The ACLU also supported partners to pass important bills, like the Access to Care Act to expand healthcare for immigrants in our state, and the Freedom to Read Act, which protects against book banning campaigns. And we supported our partner CAIR after an anti-free speech bill tried to remove them from the state’s Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention over the organization’s advocacy for Palestinian people.
In the 2024 Maryland General Assembly session, every action alert you signed, every phone call and email you sent to legislators, every meeting or rally you attended to demand better for all Marylanders, made a difference.
Thank you for raising your voice in support of stopping bad bills that would have violated our rights, like legislation to repeal the new law banning stops and searches based solely on the smell of marijuana, or to repeal the Child Interrogation Protection Act. Our priority bill the Second Look Act did not pass, but in its first year, it got much further than expected, with an ever-growing coalition of impacted families and community leaders. And shamefully, the legislature passed HB 814 to throw more 10- to 12-year-old Black children in jail, though we pushed hard for Governor Wes Moore to veto the bill.
The ACLU also supported partners to pass important bills, like the Access to Care Act to expand healthcare for immigrants in our state, and the Freedom to Read Act, which protects against book banning campaigns. And we supported our partner CAIR after an anti-free speech bill tried to remove them from the state’s Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention over the organization’s advocacy for Palestinian people.
Staff Playlists
Check out the playlists staff members from the ACLU of Maryland put together for heritage and celebratory months:
Each playlist is available on Spotify and YouTube.
Check out the playlists staff members from the ACLU of Maryland put together for heritage and celebratory months:
Each playlist is available on Spotify and YouTube.
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