Showing posts with label police brutality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police brutality. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2025

NLG stands in support of the Prairieland defendants facing unchecked Federal repression

 Sent out the evening of August 11th.


 

The National Lawyers Guild Stands in Support of the Prairieland Defendants Facing Unchecked Federal Repression

Dear [ ],
 

Update: The number of those arrested is now at 17.

On July 4th, a noise demonstration took place outside of the ICE Prairieland Detention Center in Texas. What was a typical pro-immigrant protest has turned into a massive federal investigation, with 16 defendants now facing criminal charges. The National Lawyers Guild (NLG [ NLG.org ]), The Dallas-Fort Worth chapter of the NLG, the TexOma region of the NLG, and the Mass Defense Committee of the NLG stand in support of the Prairieland Defendants.

Community members went to the Prairieland Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Alvarado, Texas, to rally against ICE's violent and relentless attacks on immigrants, and to express solidarity with those imprisoned inside the detention center. There was a planned noise demonstration at the facility, where fireworks were used, and other loud noises were made. Making noise outside of jails is an extremely common form of protest, extending solidarity to those behind bars. As the rally went on, ICE agents called the local police department. After local police arrived, one officer claimed to have sustained a minor injury to his neck by what the state claims was a gunshot. In response, the government has arrested 16 people, some through raids and traffic stops. Yet, through all of the federal government's criminal complaints, only two people have been described as alleged shooters.

Expansive and Unchecked State Repression

Due to unchecked state repression, people present at the noise demonstration are now facing decades of prison time and years of pre-trial detention, regardless of their actions or knowledge. For weeks, local and federal agents have terrorized friends and family members of those arrested at the rally, serving no-knock warrants and conducting widespread surveillance. Multiple people arrested were not even at the demonstration on July 4th. Most defendants remain detained without formal charges, without legal representation, and in limbo between state and federal jurisdiction. Finding attorneys has been extremely difficult given the incredibly repressive behavior of the government.

We are witnessing state repression in real time. It is clear that police and prosecutors hope that the deplorable conditions of imprisonment will break the defendants and compel cooperation under duress. State and federal agents are wielding their power to silence people who dissent, to terrify and deter the public from exercising their rights to protest, and to make an example of the Prairieland Defendants in order to quash anti-ICE speech. The government seems determined to criminalize everyone even remotely related to the July 4th rally, regardless of their level of involvement. The flurry of arrests and severe charges are meant to suppress political organizing and free speech.

Defendants Facing Violent Jail Conditions

Lawyers who have visited the defendants say Johnson County Jail's conditions are reprehensible. At least two defendants have been placed in solitary confinement without any explanation. One defendant was forced to clean the walls of feces left by a previously held prisoner. The defendants' ability to communicate with friends and family outside the jail has been restricted at least twice, without any notice or explanation. At least three of the defendants are being strip-searched regularly, even though they are in solitary confinement. Two of the defendants are vegan and were not fed appropriate food. The jail has denied multiple defendants necessary medical accommodations such as a basic pillow and blood pressure medication, resulting in serious pain and potentially lasting injury. Additionally, trans individuals have been dead-named and misgendered by the jail, the media, and their own state-appointed attorneys, even though their names have been legally changed to reflect their gender.

Making matters worse, the majority of the defendants are under federal investigations, yet are still being held on state charges. The state's actions reflect their aim to criminalize people who stand up to ICE's excesses. We have seen similar repression in Atlanta, GeorgiaSpokane, Washington, and Los Angeles, California. It is abominable to arrest and detain people simply for their proximity to an alleged offense, in the absence of probable cause. The state's case has failed to afford the defendants their due process and is a clear violation of their rights.

To support the defendants, contribute here: https://givesendgo.com/supportDFWprotestors


Friday, July 11, 2025

BAP on the anti-austerity demonstrations in Kenya 2024-2025

Sent out in the afternoon on July 10th and originally posted at:  blackallianceforpeace.com/bapstatements/bap-stand-with-kenya-gen-z-movement 



See also:  en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenya_Finance_Bill_protests



[ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenya_Finance_Bill_2024 ]



[ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Kenyan_protests ]



[There were democracy demonstrations on Saba Saba Day (July 7th) in 1990, 2020, 2024, and 2025 in Kenya; in Tanzania Saba Saba Day commemorates the founding of the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) in 1954 ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanganyika_African_National_Union ) and the ongoing Dar es Salaam International Trade Fairen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saba_Saba_Day ]



["Exporting Repression: Haitians And Kenyans Are Both Fighting Neo-colonial Representatives of U.S.-led Imperialism"  blackallianceforpeace.com/bapstatements/exporting-repression ]



[ diario-octubre.com/2025/07/18/el-frente-de-las-materias-primas-estrategicas-africa/ ]



[An article on trade between Iran and African countries.] 



[Slightly edited?] 




The Black Alliance for Peace Stands Unequivocally Behind Kenya’s Youth Upholding Resistance Against U.S. Puppet State Imperialism and Neo-Liberalism


In June 2024, Kenya was racked by youth mobilizations, referred to as the Gen Z Movement protests, as that nation’s young people rose up against the neo-liberal austerity measures enacted by the U.S. lackey president William Ruto. In typical fashion, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had demanded increased taxation and funding cuts to a country whose leadership has privileged the dictates of imperialism over its own people. Kenya’s police killed 60 people during those 2024 actions but the popular struggle resulted in the plans for taxation being cancelled.


On the first anniversary of these actions the young people rose up again in opposition to the Ruto government which sent its troops to Haiti at the behest of the U.S. government, and which was designated a major non-NATO ally in gratitude for its posture as a vassal state. Kenya’s police state is again killing those who oppose, including journalist Albert Ojwang, who died in police custody, and more recently Boniface Kariuki, ostensibly for protesting Ojwang’s assassination.


The Africa Team of the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) and the organizing arm of the U.S. Out of Africa Network (USOAN) once again stands in solidarity with the masses of Kenyans fighting against the neo-liberal austerity schemes and obedience to U.S. imperialism. Despite the fascist repression, the youth of Kenya are fearless in their resolve and persist in declaring and exposing the illegitimacy of the compradors of neo-colonialism.


The Gen-Z Movement represents the offspring or torch bearers of the unfinished revolution of the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (KLFA), known also as the Mau Mau, whose valiant fight paved the path toward defeat of their British colonizers in 1960. Gen-Z are the political cubs of their predecessors Comrades Dedan Kimathi, Mzalendo Bildad Kaggia, Wasonga Sijeyo, Pio Gama Pinto, and Mzalendo Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, true revolutionary heroes who stood firm in the fight for the genuine independence of Kenya.


BAP and the USOAN are clear that for the movement to decolonize Kenya to be complete the running dogs of imperialism must be driven from office and the neo-colonial economic structures must be dismantled allowing a truly sovereign Kenya to be established, untethered to the U.S.-EU-NATO Axis of Domination.


BAP remains unequivocal in the demand for U.S. imperialism to cease propping up the Ruto regime, for the unconditional and immediate release of our Kenyan family detailed and jailed during these protests, and for reparations to be dispensed to the family and loved ones of those killed by the state and their goons.


Forward to expelling AFRICOM from the entire continent!


Forward to dethroning the comprador class in Africa!


Forward to one united, socialist Africa!


No Compromise!


No Retreat!


Tuesday, June 10, 2025

UNAC and BAP statements on the resistance to ICE in LA and across the US [+ more]

 Sent out the morning of June 9th and originally posted at:  nepajac.org/laprotests.htm


End the ICE Raids

Support the Protests


[Photo]


UNAC supports the spontaneous protests by the Los Angeles communities against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids on workplaces and shopping sites. These raids have caused fear and anger in the Chicano and Mexicano communities but on June 6 the community responded in a massive way.  They fought back. Slogans of “ICE out of LA!” and “When Chicanos are under attack we will stand up and fight back!” were heard.


ICE and FBI agents tried to disperse the crowd by escalating attacks against the people and firing tear gas, rubber bullets and flash bang grenades into the crowds. Trump has called in thousands of members of the National Guard to occupy the communities to try and stop any future protests.  But when there is repression, we know there will be a response. 


Just as the US conducts wars on the people of other countries around the world, the ICE raids and the repression against the LA protests are manifestation of the wars at home.  UNAC encourages support for the LA protests and opposition to the ICE raids in LA and around the country.


End all ICE raids!


Stop the Deportations of migrants and political activists!


Support the Protests against the raids!






Sent out this afternoon (June 10th) and originally posted at:  blackallianceforpeace.com/bapstatements/oppression-breeds-resistance-organization-sustains-it


Oppression Breeds Resistance, Organization Sustains It

Defeating the War on Black/African People Requires Solidarity with Immigrants and Resistance Against Our Common Enemy

As community defenders, organizers, and residents resisted Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Los Angeles this past weekend, the state has responded by calling in the FBI and Border Patrol SWAT units, utilizing Blackhawk helicopters to deliver munitions and military-grade equipment, and mobilizing the National Guard and Marines to quell the justified uprising. As our comrades in SoCal BAP have clearly stated, this is domestic warfare.

The connection could not be clearer between the specific kidnappings orchestrated by ICE and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in Los Angeles on one hand, and the broad militarization of our cities and neighborhoods on the other. Those resisting on the ground in LA have drawn clear parallels with the struggle of the Palestinian Resistance in Gaza, the uprisings of 2020-21, the broader Black Liberation Movement, and the anti-colonial resistance against U.S. imperialism throughout the Americas. Meanwhile, some observers have encouraged Black/African people to ‘sit this one out’ because it supposedly does not involve “us”.

The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) unequivocally rejects this narrative that the oppression of immigrants and migrant communities, and the fascist operations of ICE/DHS, are irrelevant for Black/African people. Black/African people are already resisting and standing in solidarity in LA, just as people and communities of all backgrounds mobilized during the uprisings of 2020. Beyond this, we know that Black immigrants throughout the U.S. are disproportionately targeted for criminalization, detention, and deportation. Further, mass deportation not only dehumanizes immigrants, but it deepens the carceral and punitive hold of these state over all oppressed residents. This also extends beyond the borders of the U.S., as we continue to see Haitian immigrants and descendants in the Dominican Republic being summarily rounded up, brutalized, deported, and in some cases, killed, in what effectively amounts to an apartheid regime under President Luis Abinader.

Our resistance efforts must be directed at the imperialist structure and forces that cause this situation. What is urgently required is not only solidarity in mobilization, but coordination and organization that can sustain resistance against the physical, structural, and psychological violence of the oppressive forces of imperialism, colonialism, white supremacy, and patriarchy. For this reason, BAP’s central campaign, ‘No Compromise No Retreat: Defeat the War Against Africans / Black People in the U.S. and abroad’ aims to provide a common collective direction toward true peace (i.e. liberation), interconnected anti-imperialist organizing and resistance, and the realization of dignity and self-determination through the framework of People(s)-Centered Human Rights.

A core aspect of this revamped campaign focuses on shutting down ICE and CB the root causes of forced/coerced migration, including ending the criminalization of migration and the dehumanization of migrating people, as well as defending against the violations of national sovereignty that created the conditions for forced displacement and migration in the first place. As Abraham Paulous of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration made clear in BAP’s April webinar “Migration, State Violence, and Global Displacement,” the criminalization of immigration has for decades been utilized as a justification for state violence against and control over Black, Latinx, immigrant, and marginalized communities – advancing the war against our people. This has been particularly aggressive since the passing of the 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act under U.S. President Bill Clinton.

These violations are the result of imperialist domination and capitalist exploitation, which similarly forced millions of Black/African people to leave the U.S. South throughout the twentieth century. While this is called ‘the Great Migration’, we know that the displacement from land, relationships, community, and livelihoods was primarily caused by white supremacist terror and economic attacks on our people. Instead of falling into nativist arguments about who Black/African people should and should not care about, we must direct our energy, our organizing, our resistance at the imperialists and the capitalists who oppress us all, and who thrive off of our disunity and confusion.

We take inspiration from the actions of resistance from those in Los Angeles County and the organizing that has emerged from the Community Self-Defense Coalition, which BAP SoCal is a part of. From Los Angeles to Santo Domingo to Khartoum to Gaza, defeating the war on Black/African people requires unity in resistance and struggle against the many forms of imperialist violence.

No Compromise, No Retreat!




La Opresión Genera Resistencia, la Organización la Mantiene

La derrota de la guerra contra las personas negras/africanas exige solidaridad con lxs inmigrantes y resistencia contra nuestro enemigo común.

Como defensores de la comunidad, organizadores y residentes resistieron al Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (ICE) en Los Ángeles este fin de semana pasado, el estado ha respondido llamando al FBI y a las unidades SWAT de la Patrulla Fronteriza, utilizando helicópteros Blackhawk para entregar municiones y equipo de grado militar, y movilizando a la Guardia Nacional y a los Marines para sofocar el levantamiento justificado. Como nuestros compañeros de SoCal BAP han dicho claramente, esto es una guerra doméstica.

La conexión no podría ser más clara entre los secuestros específicos orquestados por el ICE y el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS) en Los Ángeles, por un lado, y la amplia militarización de nuestras ciudades y barrios, por el otro. Los que resisten sobre el terreno en Los Ángeles han trazado claros paralelismos con la lucha de la Resistencia Palestina en Gaza, las insurrecciones de 2020-21 contra el terror racista policial, el más amplio Movimiento de Liberación Negra y la resistencia anticolonial contra el imperialismo estadounidense en todo el continente americano. Mientras tanto, algunos observadores han animado a las personas negras/africanas a “no participar” porque supuestamente no se trata de “nosotros”.

La Alianza Negra por la Paz (BAP) rechaza inequívocamente esta narrativa de que la opresión de lxs inmigrantes y las comunidades migrantes, y las operaciones fascistas de ICE / DHS, son irrelevantes para las personas negras/africanas. Las personas negras/africanas ya están resistiendo y solidarizándose en Los Ángeles, al igual que las personas y comunidades de todos los orígenes se movilizaron durante los levantamientos de 2020. Más allá de esto, sabemos que lxs inmigrantes negrxs en los EE.UU. son desproporcionadamente objeto de criminalización, detención y deportación. Además, la deportación masiva no sólo deshumaniza a los inmigrantes, sino que profundiza el control carcelario y punitivo de estos estados sobre todos los residentes oprimidos. Esto también se extiende más allá de las fronteras de los EE.UU., ya que seguimos viendo cómo lxs inmigrantes haitianxs y sus descendientes en la República Dominicana son sumariamente detenidos, maltratados, deportados y, en algunos casos, asesinados, en lo que efectivamente equivale a un régimen de apartheid bajo el presidente Luis Abinader.

Nuestros esfuerzos de resistencia deben dirigirse contra la estructura y las fuerzas imperialistas que provocan esta situación. Lo que se necesita urgentemente no es sólo solidaridad en la movilización, sino coordinación y organización que puedan sostener la resistencia contra la violencia física, estructural y psicológica de las fuerzas opresoras del imperialismo, el colonialismo, la supremacía blanca y el patriarcado. Por esta razón, la campaña central de BAP, “No Compromise No Retreat (Sin compromiso, Sin retirada): Derrota a la guerra contra las personas negras/africanas en EE.UU. y en el extranjero” tiene como objetivo proporcionar una dirección colectiva común hacia la paz verdadera (es decir, la liberación), la organización y la resistencia antiimperialistas interconectadas y la realización de la dignidad y la autodeterminación a través del marco de los Derechos Humanos Centrados en los Pueblos.

Un aspecto central de esta campaña renovada se centra en el cierre del ICE y en la lucha contra las causas profundas de la migración forzada, lo que incluye poner fin a la criminalización de la migración y la deshumanización de las personas que migran, así como la defensa contra las violaciones de la soberanía nacional que crearon las condiciones para el desplazamiento forzado y la migración en primer lugar. Como Abraham Paulous, de la Alianza Negra por una Inmigración Justa (BAJI), dejó claro en el seminario web de BAP de abril “Migración, violencia de Estado y desplazamiento global”, la criminalización de la inmigración se ha utilizado durante décadas como justificación de la violencia de Estado contra las comunidades negras, indígenas, latinas, inmigrantes y marginadas y para controlarlas, avanzando en la guerra contra nuestro pueblo. Esto ha sido especialmente agresivo desde la aprobación de la Ley de Reforma de la Inmigración Ilegal y Responsabilidad de los Inmigrantes de 1996, bajo la presidencia de Bill Clinton.

Estas violaciones son el resultado de la dominación imperialista y la explotación capitalista, que de forma similar obligaron a millones de negrxs/africanxs a abandonar el sur de Estados Unidos a lo largo del siglo XX. Aunque a esto se le llama “la Gran Migración”, sabemos que el desplazamiento de la tierra, las relaciones, la comunidad y los medios de subsistencia fue causado principalmente por el terror supremacista blanco y los ataques económicos contra nuestro pueblo. En lugar de caer en discusiones nativistas sobre quiénes son las personas negras/africanas que deben o no deben preocuparse por nosotros, debemos dirigir nuestra energía, nuestra organización y nuestra resistencia a los imperialistas y capitalistas que nos oprimen a todos y que se aprovechan de nuestra desunión y confusión.

Nos inspiramos en las acciones de resistencia del condado de Los Ángeles y en la organización que ha surgido de la Coalición de Autodefensa Comunitaria, de la que SoCal BAP forma parte. De Los Ángeles a Santo Domingo, de Jartum a Gaza, derrotar la guerra contra las personas negras/africanas requiere unidad en la resistencia y la lucha contra las muchas formas de violencia imperialista.

¡Sin compromiso, Sin retirada!








This is the 927th post on DS overall, the 54th post in 2025, and the first this June.


Sunday, May 04, 2025

ADC on House Resolution 867 vote Monday + lawsuits against UT-Austin and the University of Michigan for retaliation over student and worker speech + Joseph Czuba sentenced + repression in France

April 29th it was announced that the French government wants to "dissolve" Urgence Palestine May 7th; there is a rapidly growing petition in opposition at:  agir.urgence-palestine.org/appelsoutiens/12/ ; it doesn't say that it is limited to French citizens; for more information on this and other domestic anti-Palestinian actions by the French government see:  samidoun.net/2025/04/stop-the-dissolution-of-urgence-palestine-take-action-now-to-confront-frances-complicity-in-genocide/  The anti-fascist group Jeunes Gardes also faces dissolution.


From the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network April 30th (linked above):


"Stop the dissolution of Urgence Palestine!

End the genocide in Gaza and throughout Palestine!

Stop the aggression against Yemen, Lebanon, Syria and the people of the region!

Haiti won, Algeria won, Vietnam won, and Palestine will win!

Victory to the Resistance!

From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!

We urge all in France and around the world to stand with Urgence Palestine.

  • Sign on to the Urgence Palestine collective statement against dissolutions: https://tiny.cc/stopdissolution
  • Demonstrate at a French embassy, consulate, or Alliance Française (official government representative of French cultural activities) in your area against the dissolution and repression — and against France’s ongoing complicity with Zionist genocide throughout occupied Palestine. Use the signs below!"






It is as if the ADC email about House Resolution 867 just vanished from my inbox.  


Contact your members of Congress throughsupport.adc.org/a/hr867 


Stop Congress from Selling Out and Criminalizing Your Individual Freedoms—Oppose H.R. 867


Washington is ready to undermine your First Amendment rights to placate Israel and its leaders. Stand firm against any attempt to strip away our individual freedoms, and to silence Americans. Complete the quick action below and tell your elected officials to oppose HR 867

H.R. 867 Criminalizes Boycotts

Seeks up to 20 years in prison and $1 million in fines for those participating in boycotts against Israel — even if it's just sharing information online.

Creates a “Blacklist”

Requires an annual roll call of nations and organizations critical of Israel, driving fear into anyone brave enough to speak out.

Grants Washington More Power

Hands Washington bureaucrats with questionable loyalties the authority to further punish students, activists, and nonprofits for free speech—an assault on our individual freedoms and American sovereignty.

Why This Matters—Right Now

H.R. 867 is an insult to everything we believe in. It trades away your right to speak up for what's right—merely to curry favor with foreign leaders. If this bill becomes law, you could be treated like a criminal for exercising the very individual freedoms afforded to you in this country. 

Don't let Congress and foreign interests decide what you can say or do. Defend your freedoms today.







Sent out the evening of May 2nd: 

 

ADC Statement: Killer of Wadee Al-Fayoumi Sentenced to 53 years



[Re-posting:


Washington, D.C. | www.adc.org | May 2, 2025 - Earlier this afternoon Joseph Czuba was sentenced to a 53 year prison [sentence] after being found guilty in February of murder, attempted murder and hate-crime charges in the death of  6 year old Wadee Alfayoumi and the wounding of his mother, Hanan Shaheen. While the sentence will not bring back Wadee, it does bring justice to Hanan, the extended family of Wadee, and the entire community.


ADC National Executive Director Abed Ayoub said, “Today we remember Wadee, and recommit ourselves to honoring his life and legacy. This sentencing brings closure to the case, and a measure of accountability and justice to a tragedy that has shaken our community. We must come together to ensure that tragedies fueled by anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian hate, and Islamophobia are never accepted as the norm in our society. We thank all those involved who worked to bring justice for Wadee. We also thank Hanan for leading and displaying incredible strength, courage, and grace since the tragic incident occurred.”


ADC calls on community members, public officials, and all people of conscience to stand with us in condemning the alarming surge of hatred that resulted in the untimely death of Wadee Al-Fayoumi, and all attempts to erase, censure and dehumanize Arabs and Palestinians here in the U.S. and abroad.  ADC will continue to fight for justice, accountability, and policy changes that protect our community from all threats.


ADC would like to thank the offices and leadership of CAIR Chicago, the Muslim Civic Coalition in IL, Attorneys Johnny Simon, Lana Nasar, and Attorneys Ben Crump and Nabeha Shaer from the Ben Crump Law Office, for their work on behalf of Hanan. ADC also thanks the entire Arab, Palestinian, and Muslim population of Chicagoland for their leadership.  


Our work is far from done, and ADC stands ready to continue this fight until all of us—regardless of religion, race, or national origin—can live free from fear. If you need our assistance, please call the ADC Legal Hotline at 844-ADC-9955 for immediate support and assistance.] 






Originally posted atadc.org/umichigan/


On International Workers’s Day, Former University Employees Sue The University of Michigan For Wrongful Termination & Blacklisting Because They Expressed


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
News from the Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice
May 1, 2025
Contact: Liz Jacob, ljacob[
at sugarlaw org], (313)-993-4505 | John Philo, jphilo[at sugarlaw org] | Valentina Pereda (ADC) vpereda[at adc org] 

ON INTERNATIONAL WORKERS’S DAY, FORMER UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES SUE THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FOR WRONGFUL TERMINATION AND BLACKLISTING BECAUSE THEY EXPRESSED PRO-PALESTINE SPEECH 

One full-time employee and seven student employees were terminated by the University of Michigan solely for attending pro-Palestine protests on non-work time and outside of their jobs. 

ANN ARBOR – On May Day, The Sugar Law Center and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee filed a federal lawsuit to protect the Constitutional and civil rights of workers whom the University of Michigan terminated and forever barred from future employment because they participated in pro-Palestine protests on the University’s campus. After attending a peaceful on-campus sit-in to call for the University’s divestment from Israel or participating in an impromptu demonstration on public sidewalks to call on Regents to meet with students and support divestment, workers were targeted by the University with adverse employment actions. 

After speaking out in support of Palestinian human rights, eight workers – one full-time employee and seven student workers – were fired from their employment and permanently blacklisted from future employment for the entire University of Michigan system. The lawsuit alleges that the University’s actions violate the student workers’ First Amendment right to Free Speech and their Fourteenth Amendment right to Due Process. Further, the lawsuit states that these adverse employment actions are yet another attempt from the University of Michigan to unconstitutionally punish pro-Palestine protesters at the Ann Arbor campus.  

“On May 3rd, 2024, I joined hands with members of the campus community outside the University of Michigan Art Museum to call on the regents to speak with us about divesting from israel’s genocide on Gaza. After the Regents refused to address the students and community members of the University, University Police pepper sprayed and assaulted us. Then, eleven months later, I and other workers were fired from our university employment and blacklisted as punishment for calling for divestment,” said Eaman Ali, a plaintiff and undergraduate student at University of Michigan. “The University of Michigan Regents are attacking our right to free speech so they can avoid accountability for their complicity in genocide. Despite their attempts to punish workers and paint the pro-Palestine movement as violent, we know that the real violence is the university’s insistence on funding the mass murder of Palestinians.”

“Sadly, the University of Michigan is trying to resurrect an old but previously discarded tactic of firing and blacklisting workers whose viewpoints they don’t agree with. By all accounts, each of our clients was a dedicated employee performing necessary work for the University” said John Philo, Executive and Legal Director of the Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice. “University officials and Michigan’s Attorney General have taken many seemingly coordinated actions to undermine the free speech of pro-Palestine protesters on campus. It is critical that we fight back against these attacks on our Freedom of Speech. The University’s shameful and unconstitutional attempts to silence viewpoints by firing student workers and forever barring them from any future employment must be reversed.”  

“There is a nationwide assault on freedom of expression if you support the rights of the Palestinian people. The contempt for the constitutional rights of pro-Palestine advocates should be offensive to anyone who values their right to speak” said Chris Godshall-Bennett, National Legal Director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. “The government, whether federal, state, or a public university, cannot punish you because they don’t agree with you, even if you work for them. We will not cede these rights and those who violate them will be held to account.”

“By firing workers as a means to suppress speech it disagrees with, the University of Michigan violates their rights both as citizens and as employees,” said American Federal of Teachers- Michigan President Terrence Martin. “The Michigan labor movement stands with all workers on campus. We will always fight to uphold free speech and conduct that is protected by the First Amendment, and we’re especially alarmed that the University is prepared to violate state labor law by refusing to bargain the termination of a member of our union.”

“The University of Michigan claims to value activism, political engagement, and dissent. But when that free speech addresses the genocide in Palestine, the University is quick to rewrite its rules,” said attorney Ezra Ritchin. “Much like the Trump administration, the University policed, punished, fired, and blacklisted those who bravely spoke out in support of Palestinian life and freedom.”

The Plaintiffs are represented by attorneys John Philo, Liz Jacob, and Tony Paris at the Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice, Chris Godshall-Bennett at the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, and attorney Ezra Ritchin. 

About the Sugar Law Center

The Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice is a national non-profit, public-interest law center. Sugar Law Center provides legal advocacy, representation, education and technical support to workers and communities seeking systemic change toward economic and social justice. For more information on the Sugar Law Center, visit www.sugarlaw.org






Originally posted at:  adc.org/utaustin/


ADC, MLFA, Webber Law, and Project TAHA File Federal Civil Rights Lawsuit Against  UT-Austin, TX Governor Greg Abbott, and Other Officials  Over Arrests of Pro-Palestine Students


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
media[
at adc org]

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Austin, TX — Today, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) filed a federal lawsuit against the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), Texas Governor Greg Abbott, UT Austin President Jay Hartzell, officers of the University of Texas Police Department (“UTPD”), and officers of the Texas Department of Public Safety (“DPS”). Joining ADC as co-counsel are the Muslim Legal Fund of America (MLFA), Webber Law, and Project TAHA. The Plaintiffs contend that the defendants orchestrated mass arrests, employed physical intimidation, and imposed punitive disciplinary actions on peaceful pro-Palestine protesters at the University of Texas at Austin on April 24, 2024.

The complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, accuses Governor Abbott and UT Austin officials of intentionally suppressing pro-Palestine speech, in violation of the First Amendment and Title VI. Officers enforced an “arrest quota” and arrested peaceful protesters without probable cause, employing excessive crowd-control tactics that included tackling students, zip-tying them so tightly as to cause bruises and numbness, and forcibly removing a Muslim student’s religious head covering. Even after criminal charges were dropped for lack of probable cause, UT Austin administrators imposed retaliatory disciplinary measures—academic holds, suspensions, and threats of harsher sanctions—to deter future demonstrations.

UT Austin violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by discriminating against Palestinian students and those associated with them. The plaintiffs, who include current and former UT Austin students, assert they suffered physical injuries, lived in fear of further punishment, and were directly targeted based on anti-Palestinian bias.

ADC seeks the following relief for the affected students:

  • Declaratory Judgment that officials violated Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.
  • Reversal of Disciplinary Actions against student protesters.
  • Compensatory and Punitive Damages for physical, emotional, and academic harm.
  • Attorneys’ Fees and Costs under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.

This lawsuit is about more than a single protest; it’s about safeguarding two of the most sacred rights in our democracy—free speech and peaceful assembly,” said ADC National Executive Director, Abed Ayoub. “Standing beside these courageous students means defending the very pillars of our Constitution and preserving the ideals that define us as Americans. Their bravery in the face of intimidation exemplifies the best of who we are, and this monumental case will help ensure that our fundamental liberties remain strong for generations to come.”

“These plaintiffs demonstrated extraordinary courage by speaking out against the genocide in Palestine—a choice that lies at the heart of our American tradition of dissent. State officials responded by brutalizing and arresting them with the explicit goal of suppressing their speech,” said ADC Legal Director, Chris Godshall-Bennett. “What happened at UT Austin is but one example of the attacks on student activists’ rights that paved the way for the escalation we are seeing today. We have not forgotten what was done to these students and the officials responsible must be held to account.”

Christina Jump, Civil Litigation Department Head, Legal Division of MLFA, said, “Texas’ political leaders claim to support the First Amendment, and even passed a state law mirroring the First Amendment–specifically as to college campuses—in 2019.  But they’ve shown they only uphold that freedom where it applies to viewpoints that align with their own. We proudly join the ADC in representing these students who suffered from that biased application of Texas’ own laws, as well as its outright violations of federal statutes. Free speech rights matter, for all groups and viewpoints, equally. Texas forgot that point.” 

Chelsea Glover, Civil Litigation Senior Staff Attorney, Legal Division of MLFA, said, “We are proud to join ADC in representing students whose rights were violated solely because they spoke out to support Palestinians. UT is a public university bound by the First Amendment and Civil Rights Act, and Greg Abbott cannot commandeer a school to enforce his preferred perspective.”

Maria Kari from Project TAHA added, “This case is about justice—plain and simple. Our plaintiffs represent the best of what our democracy promises. Their courage must be celebrated, and their suffering must be addressed. The harm inflicted on them must be acknowledged, and those who orchestrated this assault on their constitutional rights—especially their First and Fourth Amendment protections—must face the consequences. The law is clear: peaceful protest is not a crime. It is a cornerstone of our democracy.”

Key Allegations

    1. Viewpoint Discrimination
      The lawsuit asserts that Governor Abbott and UT Austin officials intentionally suppressed pro-Palestine speech. Plaintiffs claim that officers operated under an “arrest quota,” as revealed by internal communications and overheard statements.
    2. First Amendment Violations
      Plaintiffs engaged in peaceful, constitutionally protected assembly on campus. According to the lawsuit, officials ordered mass arrests without probable cause, used overzealous crowd-control methods, and imposed disciplinary measures designed to chill future speech.
  • Title VI Violations

The complaint alleges that the defendants’ actions were also motivated by anti-Palestinian animus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

  1. Unlawful Arrests
    The complaint describes how multiple officers tackled students, tightened zip ties to the point of causing bruises and nerve injuries, and removed religious head coverings from Muslim women. Plaintiffs stated they posed no threat and complied with law enforcement directives.
  2. Retaliatory Campus Discipline
    UT Austin administrators continued to penalize protesters after Travis County dropped criminal charges for lack of probable cause. The lawsuit describes how officials imposed academic holds, suspended students, and threatened harsher sanctions if they appealed these outcomes.

Plaintiffs

  • A second-year UT Austin student. Officers slammed her to the ground and zip-tied her so tightly that she experienced numbness in her hands.
  • A recent UT Austin graduate. Officers tackled her face-down and pressed a knee on her neck, leaving bruises and nerve compression injuries in her wrists.
  • A recent UT Austin graduate. Multiple officers forcibly grabbed and zip-tied her arms after she warned others to clear the area.
  • A third-year UT Austin student who wears a hijab. Officers removed her hijab during arrest and left her with painful welts from tight zip ties.

Legal Claims

  • Count I: Violation of the First Amendment (42 U.S.C. § 1983)
    Officials targeted students for their pro-Palestine views, silencing their speech and arresting them without legal cause.
  • Count II: First Amendment Retaliation (42 U.S.C. § 1983)
  • Officers arrested protestors because they expressed pro-Palestine views.
  • Count III: Fourth Amendment Unlawful Seizure/False Arrest (42 U.S.C. § 1983)
    Officers arrested protesters without probable cause and restrained them with zip ties that caused physical harm.
  • Count IV: Violation of Title VI (42 U.S.C. § 2000d)
    Officials targeted students for their association with Palestinians.

ADC remains committed to ensuring that every person can exercise their rights to free speech and peaceful assembly—the bedrocks of our democracy. This lawsuit reaffirms our dedication to defending the Constitution from any attempt to stifle dissent. We applaud these students’ courage and call on institutions and communities across the country to protect civil liberties. We urge the public to follow this case closely and to join us in championing the principles that strengthen our democracy.






Sent out in afternoon May 1st; slightly edited:

 

Breaking: We are suing Gov. Abbott of Texas for targeting of our students


May 1, 2025

 

Dear [ ], 

 

I am writing to let you know that ADC just filed another case in federal court, this one is against Texas Governor Greg Abbott and the Texas Police officers who violently targeted and attacked our students at the University of Texas-Austin. This is the third lawsuit filed by ADC within the past few weeks as  part of our continued commitment to protect our community. As an organization that is funded by community and for community, this work is only possible because of support from members like you.

 

The actions taken by Governor Abbot and the defendants pose serious threats and concerns to the rights of all Americans. Make no mistake – Governor Abbott and others value the interests of Israel over the protected constitutional rights of all Americans. We will not sit by idly during this unprecedented attack on our First Amendment rights in this country.

 

One year ago this week, officials ordered a violent crackdown of a planned and peaceful sit-in at the University of Texas. – Austin Police Officers enforcing an “arrest quota” designed for splashy media headlines arrested peaceful protesters without probable cause, employing excessive tactics that included tackling students, zip-tying them so tightly as to cause bruises and numbness, and forcibly removing a Muslim student’s hijab.

 

This lawsuit is a culmination of an extensive and joint effort with our co-counselors, the Muslim Legal Fund of America (MLFA), Webber Law, and Project TAHA. We are seeking reversal of any and all disciplinary actions against the students, as well as compensatory and punitive damages for the physical, emotional and academic harm inflicted on the students by the defendants.

 

In mid-March of this year ADC filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of an international student targeted by the U.S. State Department for his pro-Palestine speech, and just last week ADC filed a lawsuit on behalf of a Palestinian American who was brutally tazed and beaten by Los Angeles area police simply for being an Arab American.

 

The work is not done. Our legal department is working on additional lawsuits which will be filed in the coming weeks. None of this can happen without your support. I am asking that you consider making a contribution to these efforts today and help us continue working on your behalf. 

In solidarity,

 

Abed A. Ayoub

National Executive Director

 

More from Reuters:  Students sue Texas university, governor over Gaza protest arrests