Public Accountability’s 2023, Wrapped

Friends,

It's been a busy year here at Public Accountability. In the last 12 months we've served more clients, won more cases, and advanced the cause of public accountability more than ever before. And your support has been vital to our efforts. I want to tell you a bit about our year, and then I'm going to ask you to help us continue to expand rights and remedies next year.

Fighting to Keep Bivens Alive

Bivens is the doctrine that lets you sue federal agents. (See our detailed writeup here.) Problem is, the Supreme Court has been cutting away at Bivens for decades, and in late 2022 the Ninth Circuit issued a decision that would have killed it entirely. So we opened 2023 by asking the court to rehear the case en banc. We didn't get the rehearing, but we did get the court to delete the worst bits and issue an amended opinion. So Bivens lives to fight another day. And we're carrying on the fight: We just finished briefing a case arguing that federal prisoners can sue prison staff who refuse to treat their injuries.

Defending Parents and Teachers from MAGA Activists

Far-right extremists took over the Newberg School Board in Newberg, OR, and banned Black Lives Matter and Pride symbols. Some parents and teachers, concerned about this new and radical direction in their schools, joined a Facebook group to talk about holding their elected school-board directors accountable. In retaliation, the board’s conservative majority sued four parents and teachers. We teamed up with the ACLU of Oregon and prominent local civil-rights lawyers to fight back, and in July we won a complete victory. Notch one for free speech.

No, You Can't Force Prisoners into a Covid Party

Do prisoners have a clearly established right against being forced to participate in a “Covid party”? We think so—but the State of Connecticut disagreed. In April 2020, our client was forced to move from a cell block where everyone was healthy to one that was in the middle of an active Covid outbreak. He caught Covid—the original, extremely dangerous variant—and nearly died. We argued that that amounted to cruel and unusual punishment. In October, we notched another complete victory: The court ruled that the warden violated his rights and it denied her request for qualified immunity.

By the Numbers

Those are just a few of the cases we worked on this year. Here's the rest of the scorecard:

  • 14 clients served

  • 11 briefs filed

  • 3 oral arguments presented

  • 2 wins (and one decision pending—we could still be 3 for 3!)

A Request

The work we do is critical. Every day, police officers, prison guards, and other state actors abuse their power and violate people's constitutional rights. They bet that people can't fight back, and too often they're right. But Public Accountability is there—to help you fight back, to hold officials accountable, and to change the law so they can't keep getting away with it. So if you can, please support our work and donate.

* * *

Thanks for reading, and happy holidays.

In gratitude and solidarity,

Athul K. Acharya
Founder & Executive Director, Public Accountability

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