The establishing that more for the worst homicides is an important addition to the growing body of data that Americans from all walks of life are rejecting the promises of politicians and prosecutors that the death penalty is a panacea for serious crimes. Like New Jersey's Death Penalty Study Commission, Pennsylvanians are recognizing the serious and enduring problems in the administration of the death penalty, including wrongful convictions, prosecutorial misconduct, failures in the quality of counsel for those charged with or convicted of capital crimes, and racial, class and geographic bias in administration. This recognition has led more and more people, including surviving victims' family members, to recognize that the death penalty is too expensive, too arbitrary, and too irrevocable for the criminal justice system to continue to employ it.
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Press ReleaseDec 2025
Criminal Law Reform
Smart Justice
Aclu Responds To President Trump鈥檚 Announcement Rescheduling Marijuana. Explore Press Release.红杏视频 Responds to President Trump鈥檚 Announcement Rescheduling Marijuana
WASHINGTON 鈥 President Trump announced today that he will direct executive agencies to reclassify marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III under federal law, recognizing that marijuana has accepted medical uses and a lower potential for dependence. Marijuana is currently classified alongside substances such as heroin, and rescheduling would instead place it alongside medications like Tylenol with codeine. The announcement follows years of advocacy directed at many administrations, expanding scientific research, and widespread state-level reforms. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 announcement is a significant step toward aligning federal marijuana policy with science, evidence, and the realities on the ground in states across the country,鈥 said Nina Patel, senior policy counsel at the 红杏视频. 鈥淐ongress must now pass the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act and the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act (MORE Act) to ensure justice for the people and communities harmed by the war on drugs. These federal bills would remove federal criminal penalties for marijuana, provide criminal history record clearing, and necessary investments in communities disproportionately targeted for criminalization. The 红杏视频 will continue the fight to end unjust and punitive drug polices for everyone and the creation of a more perfect union for all.鈥 -
Press ReleaseAug 2025
Smart Justice
Aclu And Partners Reach A Landmark Settlement Agreement To End Wealth-based Detention In Oklahoma. Explore Press Release.红杏视频 and Partners Reach a Landmark Settlement Agreement to End Wealth-Based Detention in Oklahoma
OKLAHOMA CITY 鈥 The 红杏视频, 红杏视频 of Oklahoma, and Covington & Burling LLP announced a landmark agreement today with court leadership in Canadian County, Oklahoma that, if approved by the federal judge presiding over the case, would put an end to the unconstitutional practice of jailing people simply because they cannot afford bail. Under the agreement, judges in Canadian County must determine a person鈥檚 ability to pay before imposing cash bail. The agreement also prohibits conditioning release on paying cash bail unless the court finds that doing so is necessary because nonfinancial conditions will not adequately ensure future court appearance or protect the public. This marks a major step toward ending wealth-based detention in Oklahoma. 鈥淭his agreement marks a major step toward ending a two-tiered justice system in Oklahoma where wealth determined who stayed in jail and who walked free,鈥 said Brandon Buskey, director of the 红杏视频鈥檚 Criminal Law Reform Project. 鈥淔or far too long, people who are presumed innocent have been languishing in jail when they could have otherwise been safely in their communities. The procedures we have implemented are critical to building a more just and equitable pretrial system for all.鈥 If approved, the settlement would resolve a federal class action lawsuit, White v. Hesse, brought in 2019 on behalf of people detained pretrial in Canadian County. Plaintiffs challenged the unconstitutional use of a preprinted bail schedule and the policy and practice of imposing cash bail without individualized hearings or ability to pay assessments. As a result, people were routinely held in jail for weeks without receiving a meaningful hearing. 鈥淪pending even a few days in jail can upend a person鈥檚 entire life,鈥 said Megan Lambert, legal director at the 红杏视频 of Oklahoma. 鈥淧eople risk losing their jobs, their housing, and even custody of their children, making it more difficult to rebuild their lives upon release. Cash bail traps people in a cycle of discrimination, poverty, and incarceration. Today鈥檚 agreement interrupts that cycle to better ensure that no one is locked up simply because they cannot afford to pay for their freedom.鈥 The full agreement is here: /cases/white-et-al-v-hesse-et-al?document=Consent-DecreeCourt Case: White, et al. v. Hesse, et al.Affiliate: Oklahoma -
Press ReleaseAug 2025
Smart Justice
Aclu Condemns Trump Executive Orders Targeting Cash Bail Reform In Washington, D.c.. Explore Press Release.红杏视频 Condemns Trump Executive Orders Targeting Cash Bail Reform in Washington, D.C.
WASHINGTON 鈥 President Trump signed two executive orders today attempting to end Washington, D.C.鈥檚 cash bail reforms and threatening to withhold federal funds from cities with similar policies. Below is a statement from Cynthia Roseberry, director of policy and government affairs with the 红杏视频鈥檚 Justice Division, in response to the orders: 鈥淭o further his dangerous, performative abuse of power in D.C., President Trump today took another step to make people in our nation鈥檚 capital less safe by targeting common sense bail reforms. These executive orders are another blatant power grab by the Trump administration that will only serve to benefit the predatory bail industry. But the people who will be most impacted are those with the fewest resources. Whether we can afford to pay should never determine our freedom.鈥 鈥淭he President鈥檚 attempt to end cash bail risks increasing pretrial detention, which is not a real solution to preventing crime in D.C. It can actually have a negative effect on public safety, by separating people from their support networks, jobs, and housing,鈥 said Alicia Yass, supervisory policy counsel at 红杏视频 of the District of Columbia. 鈥淓ven short periods of unnecessary detention increase a person's risk of re-arrest, and cash bail has been associated with a 6 to 9 percent increase in reoffending or committing another crime. Cash bail has long punished people living below the poverty line 鈥 especially Black and Brown communities. It is our constitutional right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. Pretrial detention does just the opposite 鈥 it treats certain people as guilty until proven innocent.鈥Affiliate: Washington, D.C. -
GeorgiaMay 2025
Criminal Law Reform
Smart Justice
Coronell, Et Al. V. Georgia. Explore Case.Coronell, et al. v. Georgia
As a result of Georgia Senate Bill 63, thousands of people are being kept in jail pre-trial because they can鈥檛 afford to post bail, even when a judge believes the person should have been released until trial with no risk to the public. The 红杏视频鈥檚 Criminal Law Reform Project, along with 红杏视频-GA and the Southern Center for Human Rights, filed a class action lawsuit challenging SB63鈥檚 mandatory monetary bail provisions under the Georgia State Constitution.Status: Ongoing