ACLU calls on Governor Baker to sign police reform into law
This police reform bill represents meaningful progress for Massachusetts, even as more work remains to be done.
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This police reform bill represents meaningful progress for Massachusetts, even as more work remains to be done.
As the Commonwealth enters the deadliest phase of the pandemic so far, more action is required to protect the health of incarcerated people, correctional staff, and community members.
Amid a nationwide reckoning with police brutality and racial injustice, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Court has affirmed the right to secretly record police performing their pubic duties.
The Supreme Judicial Court has emphatically declared that laws which target people who ask for charity are unconstitutional and a violation of civil rights and civil liberties.
Governor Baker today proposed amendments to the omnibus policing bill. Among other amendments, the new bill cuts proposed regulations to face surveillance technology.
Making vaccines available to incarcerated people is an important step toward containing COVID-19 inside and outside of jails and prisons, but leaders should also act now to reduce incarceration levels and increase testing.