Photo of the exterior of a Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) building. The wall is made of square and rectangular stone tiles in shades of beige and brown. Mounted in large gold letters is the text “DEPARTMENT OF MOTOR VEHICLES.” A portion of a parked vehicle and tree branches are visible in the foreground.

ACLU of Nevada sues DMV to learn extent of its cooperation with ICE

The ACLU of Nevada is suing the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles for allegedly failing to provide records in accordance with state law, including correspondence with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Latest Press Release


Civil Rights Advocates React to Senate Passage of Lombardo Crime Bill

The Nevada Senate voted after midnight Wednesday to approve AB4, Gov. Lombardo’s crime bill, creating regressive, data-averse policies and allowing for the reestablishment of the “Casino Company Court” that previously targeted people experiencing homelessness for criminal prosecution
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Stay informed on civil rights issues. Discover our latest actions and updates in the Press Release section.

The Biden Administration’s Women’s Rights To-Do List

When President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris take office, their administration must make equity for women and families a top priority.

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The Biden Administration Can Make Us All Safer: End ICE Collaboration Programs

Dismantling these programs will send a powerful signal to immigrant communities: the Biden administration will not continue Trump’s agenda of xenophobia and abuse.

immigration protest

ACLU of Nevada Names 2020 Honorees

The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada is pleased to announce our 2020 honorees. We will hold a virtual event Dec. 5 to recognize this year’s award winners. Award recipients are typically honored at the ACLUNV’s annual fundraisers in Las Vegas and Reno, but that was impossible this year because of the pandemic.

Graphic includes an image of the Statue of Liberty and thoe words "ACLU Nevada Celebration of Civil Liberties December 5, 2020"

How COVID-19 is Setting Working Women Back

In early October, the United States Labor Department reported that women were leaving the workforce at four times the rate of men. A few months earlier, a report from McKinsey Global revealed that while women made up 43 percent of the workforce, they had borne 56 percent of COVID-related job losses

women looking at map

President-Elect Biden’s Reproductive Freedom To-Do List

After four years of attacks on our reproductive rights and health by the Trump administration and the anti-abortion legislators it has emboldened around the country, there is much to repair.

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Men Are Being Fired for Being Caregivers. Here’s Why that Hurts Women Too.

As Ginsburg famously said, “Women will only have true equality when men share with them the responsibility of bringing up the next generation.”

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A Change in Administration Is Just A Starting Point For LGBTQ Justice

We can still make progress if we work together. If we as a community stay engaged and fight for each other and for other communities who are facing attacks, we can fix the damage at the federal level and create even better protections for LGBTQ people going forward.

James Esseks speaking outside the Supreme Court.

Securing Tenants’ Right to Counsel is Critical to Fighting Mass Evictions

Ending mass evictions is a key racial and gender justice priority. Due to decades of inequalities in our housing system, communities of color and low-income women feel the impacts of eviction the most — Black women in particular.

Protestors hold aloft a saying HOUSING IS A HUMAN RIGHT at a protest in New York City, September 2, 2020

Democracy Persists

It may have been slow — at times excruciating — but our democracy worked as it should have: Every vote will be counted. And the people will choose their leader — rather than leaders choosing the voters.

Democracy persists.