On June 22, @aclu_nationwide won a major Supreme Court decision in Carpenter v. United States. The landmark ruling changed the future of digital privacy in America. But news of the win was only the second most important thing happening at the ACLU offices that day. At 3 p.m., a call was scheduled to discuss the more than 2,000 children whose fates were tied to another #ACLU suit against the government. That case — Ms. L. v. ICE — began with a 39-year-old Congolese woman, Ms. L., whose daughter was taken from her in November 2017. But it quickly grew into a national class action on behalf of every family whose children had been taken from them. After crossing in San Diego, Ms. L. had been detained in California. Her daughter S., meanwhile, was sent to Chicago. In late January, when Ms. L. appeared before an immigration judge without a lawyer present, she hadn’t seen S. for nearly 3 months. The judge ordered Ms. L. to be removed from the U.S. When she was paroled from detention the following week, Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project and the lead lawyer on the case, guessed it was an attempt to act as if her case had nothing to do with a policy of family separation. @katygrannan photographed Ms. L. with S. in Chicago, after they reunited. In this week’s @nytmag, the writer Joel Lovell poses a question: Can the ACLU become the NRA for the left? Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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On June 22, @aclu_nationwide won a major Supreme Court decision in Carpenter v. United States. The landmark ruling changed the future of digital privacy in America. But news of the win was only the second most important thing happening at the ACLU offices that day. At 3 p.m., a call was scheduled to discuss the more than 2,000 children whose fates were tied to another #ACLU suit against the government. That case — Ms. L. v. ICE — began with a 39-year-old Congolese woman, Ms. L., whose daughter was taken from her in November 2017. But it quickly grew into a national class action on behalf of every family whose children had been taken from them. After crossing in San Diego, Ms. L. had been detained in California. Her daughter S., meanwhile, was sent to Chicago. In late January, when Ms. L. appeared before an immigration judge without a lawyer present, she hadn’t seen S. for nearly 3 months. The judge ordered Ms. L. to be removed from the U.S. When she was paroled from detention the following week, Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project and the lead lawyer on the case, guessed it was an attempt to act as if her case had nothing to do with a policy of family separation. @katygrannan photographed Ms. L. with S. in Chicago, after they reunited. In this week’s @nytmag, the writer Joel Lovell poses a question: Can the ACLU become the NRA for the left? Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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