ACLU
Report Exposes Ongoing Civil and Human Rights Violations on the
Group
Calls on Government Officials to Take Concrete Steps to Protect Storm Victims
and Prevent Further Abuse
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 20, 2007
NEW ORLEANS— The American Civil
Liberties Union today released a report revealing continuing incidents of racial
injustice and human rights abuses on the Gulf Coast since Hurricane Katrina
devastated the area two years ago.
In its report, Broken Promises: Two Years After Katrina, the ACLU
exposes numerous civil rights violations that have occurred in
“As Americans, we should all feel
ashamed of the treatment that poor people of color, prisoners, and other
vulnerable people have endured in the aftermath of Katrina,” said Anthony D.
Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU.
“Despite repeated broken promises from politicians, it is terribly
disheartening that two years later, this mistreatment still exists. The
government cannot be allowed to evade responsibility any longer for its role in
the gross civil rights violations that permeate the
In light of its findings, the
ACLU calls on Congress to pass legislation to address post-Katrina injustices,
including racial profiling, voter disenfranchisement, and the dearth of health
care facilities and low-income housing.
The ACLU also calls on the Department of Justice to investigate severe
problems at Orleans Parish Prison (OPP), the
Broken Promises poignantly
describes personal accounts of people who were victimized in Katrina’s
aftermath. In one case, Steven
Elloie, an African-American bar manager, was brutally beaten and tasered by New
Orleans police officers after they illegally searched the premises and harassed
patrons at his family-owned bar in Central City, a predominantly
African-American neighborhood.
Despite the fact that he suffered severe injuries, the police officers
brought Elloie to the OPP where he was turned away and directed to the hospital
to receive treatment for trauma to his head, body, and extremities. Charges against Elloie of resisting
arrest and battery against an officer were eventually dropped, but Elloie’s
complaint against the police officers was “not sustained” despite numerous
witness accounts that were consistent with Elloie’s claims. The ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of
Elloie against the city of
“Since the storm, the ACLU has seen an increase in complaints about police abuse, neglect of prisoners, and racial discrimination,” said Reggie Shuford, a senior staff attorney for the ACLU’s Racial Justice Project. “Sadly, horrific stories like Mr. Elloie’s are not uncommon.”
The ACLU report also describes a
case where the ACLU intervened on behalf of two displaced families from
“As the housing crisis continues
on the
In addition to discrimination and abuse on the streets, violence and neglect run rampant behind the walls of the jails, according to the ACLU report. Some conditions in OPP have even worsened since last year when the ACLU released another report, Abandoned & Abused: Orleans Parish Prisoners in the Wake of Hurricane Katrina, about the treatment of OPP’s prisoners before, during, and after the storm. The House of Detention, the largest of four jail buildings reopened since the storm, is severely overcrowded and conditions are squalid. Prisoners are forced to sleep on the floor without mattresses for weeks at a time in areas where up to 18 prisoners are held in cells designed for 10 people. There is no air-conditioning in most of the overcrowded facility despite excessive heat. These inhumane and dangerous conditions are exacerbated by severe understaffing at the jail.
“Conditions in the
According to the ACLU report, medical and mental health services at the jails are grossly inadequate. There reportedly have been several recent outbreaks of “staph” infections, a highly contagious and potentially fatal disease caused by filth and unsanitary conditions, and efforts to provide treatment are deficient. Prisoners who are identified as needing mental health care after being taken into custody have been sent to a unit where they are strapped down to a bed in five-point restraints. The ACLU has received reports of prisoners being left there, largely unsupervised, for days at a time without any breaks, even to use the restroom. The ACLU describes in its report one case where a prisoner was restrained to a bed covered in a brown substance that appeared to be blood or feces, and was forced to twist his body to urinate on the floor next to him while confined to the table at his feet, wrists, and head.
“Since the storm, the solution to
mental health problems in
The ACLU report includes personal accounts from former prisoners, evacuees, and local advocates who have endured or witnessed the chaos since the storm.
A copy of the report and video
testimonials are available online at: http://www.aclu.org/prison/conditions/katrina/katrina.html
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