katie schwartzmann

Katie Schwartzmann

Legal Director

Legal

Bio

Katie Schwartzmann, a leading civil rights attorney and social justice advocate, rejoined the ACLU of Louisiana as Legal Director in December 2018. She held this position previously from August 2005 to May 2011, serving as counsel on every ACLU of Louisiana case, including constitutional questions of freedom of speech, freedom of religion, separation of church and state, discrimination, due process, unlawful search and seizure, police misconduct and cruel and unusual prison conditions.

Schwartzmann began her legal career in 2003 as an attorney with the Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands. In 2011, Schwartzmann was named the Managing Director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Louisiana office, supervising a staff of six attorneys, four investigators and others focused on education reform, immigrant justice and prison reform. While at SPLC, Schwartzmann initiated the class action lawsuit against the oppressive Orleans Parish Prison. In 2013, she served as founding co-director and attorney of the Roderick and Solange MacArthur Justice Center at New Orleans, a civil rights law office dedicated to criminal justice reform litigation.

Schwartzmann has a J.D. from Tulane Law School in New Orleans where she graduated cum laude and received the CALI Excellence for the Future Award in International Human Rights. She graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in political science from Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
a row of prison cells

Four Cases That Put People Before Prisons

Here’s the latest on four important cases challenging unjust laws and defending the rights of incarcerated people across the state
News & Commentary
a row of prison cells

A Louisiana Parish Jailed a U.S. Citizen for Being Latinx. We’re Suing.

Ramon Torres had been a U.S. citizen for nearly ten years when he was detained for four days on an immigration hold – despite having a U.S. passport, a Louisiana driver’s license, and a Social Security card, and despite that fact that a court ordered his release.