The ACLU of Connecticut is committed to working with our partners, supporters, and community advocates to create a more equitable, democratic, and anti-racist Connecticut in which all persons are treated with dignity in a thriving society.
As we look back on all of our success in 2024, we celebrate the victories we had in the courts, at the Capitol, and within our communities. These victories, each building upon the other, showcase the power of our integrated advocacy approach, leveraging litigation, lobbying, and education to forge lasting change.
Together, with supporters like you, we will continue to defend and advance the civil rights and liberties of all people in Connecticut.
This election cycle was unprecedented, and we are already beginning to feel the effects of the new administration. During this election season, we focused immense efforts on safeguarding democratic practices and securing the vote in Connecticut. This meant registering voters all across the state, ensuring voters made a plan to vote, and educating voters about the “no-excuse” absentee voting ballot referendum.
In November 2024, Connecticut voters passed the “no-excuse” absentee voting ballot referendum to amend the state constitution to expand voting rights. We worked cloesly with partners such as Ben & Jerry's, the League of Women Voters of Connecticut, the Connecticut League of Conservation Voters Education Action, the Connecticut Project Action Fund, and others to educate voters about the question on our ballot. Now, the ACLU of Connecticut is working to ensure full implementation through policy guidance, legislative monitoring, and a coalition sign-on letter from voting rights advocacy groups across the state.
Throughout the election cycle, the policy and advocacy team registered voters all across Connecticut, including people held in pretrial detention in prisons who retain their legal voting rights. Working with Full Citizens Coalition and Yale Law Students, our teams were able to engage voters who are currently or formerly incarcerated in the electoral process.
Our senior policy organizer Anderson Curtis, in conjunction with the League of Women Voters of Connecticut and the Secretary of the State’s Office, went to McDougall-Walker Correctional Institution in Suffield at the end of September to speak with people who are incarcerated and eligible to vote.
The ACLU Foundation of Connecticut legal team dominated in the courts in 2024 with three monumental victories for the people of Connecticut.
Clark v. Quiros – In a case that sits at the nexus of the rights of trans individuals, the right to healthcare, and the rights of incarcerated people, a federal judge ruled that the Department of Correction is now required to report efforts to provide gender-affirming care for Ms. Veronica-May Clark, a transgender woman who is incarcerated in Connecticut and has been seeking gender-affirming care for nearly a decade now.
Friend v. Gasparino – In a case that vindicates our ability to observe, protest, and publicize the activities of police, a federal judge granted an outright victory for our client, Mr. Mike Friend, on almost all of his claims after being arrested for exercising his right to free speech and holding a sign reading “Cops Ahead” to display to passing drivers.
Beatty v. Lamont – In a first-of-its-kind federal case, the state abandoned its demands that our clients, Theresa Beatty, Natasha Tosado, and Douglas Johnson, each pay tens of thousands of dollars for the time they spent in prison in a case challenging the state’s practice of charging incarcerated people for their imprisonment in “pay-to-stay” laws.
Town of Avon v. Sastre – In a decision to uphold the public’s right to access public information, a state appellate court ruled in favor of our client, Mr. J. R. Sastre, that government agencies cannot evade Connecticut’s Freedom of Information Act by simply handing documents off to lawyers.
Other cases on the legal team’s docket include cases such as the following:
In a short 14 week session, the ACLU of Connecticut used every pathway to power in order to achieve results that many thought impossible.
At the end of the General Assembly’s 2024 session, the ACLU of Connecticut:
Expenses: $1,404,638
Revenue: $2,073,483
Expenses: $982,035
Revenue: $858,000
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