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On November 21, 2016, 13 Aurora police officers responded to a simple noise complaint at Alberto Torres's home. As happens all too often, Aurora police officers escalated this minor issue into a brutal affair. They beat Mr. Torres solely because he delayed exiting his garage to ask his wife to interpret for him. With that beating, the lives of Mr. Torres and every member of his family were changed and he has yet to recover. ACLU of Colorado fought to obtain justice for Mr. Torres, and Aurora has now paid him $285,000. But money is not justice, and the brutality of the Aurora Police Department against people of color has continued unabated.

It doesn't have to be this way.

Imagine, if instead of 13 officers being dispatched to Mr. Torres's home for a noise complaint, the City of Aurora sent a civilian-led response team to check on his welfare and ask that he and his friends lower their sound, resulting in a non-violent solution to a minor issue?

"ACLU Settles Case With Aurora After Police Brutalize and Unlawfully Arrest Alberto Torres," ACLU News Release, December 10, 2020

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Thursday, December 10, 2020 - 11:15am

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Hope is a discipline. It's a commitment that together, we can create a more perfect union. We won't rest until we fulfill the promise of equal rights for ALL people in the United States.
Join us in our fight to fulfill this promise and move forward with hope by donating to the ACLU of Colorado. Your donation supports the ACLU's strengths that make our work effective and collaborative.
Donate now at https://action.aclu.org/give/support-aclu-colorado

 

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Tuesday, December 8, 2020 - 10:15am

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Anthony Martinez is 84-years-old and suffering from renal failure, as well as other serious medical conditions including dementia. He is currently incarcerated in the Sterling Correctional Facility, site of one of Colorado’s largest COVID-19 outbreaks with almost 600 active COVID-19 cases. He and his family are understandably terrified that he will catch the virus and die.

In the midst of this public health crisis, incarcerated people as vulnerable as Anthony, could and should be immediately released to safely live out their remaining years with family.

Read more about Anthony Martinez and other at-risk incarcerated people. 

 

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Friday, August 28, 2020 - 10:00am

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