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City of L.A. Barred From Enforcing Nearly All Gang Injunctions, Federal Judge Rules

The city of Los Angeles has been barred from enforcing nearly all of its remaining gang injunctions, the latest blow to one of the city’s oldest and most controversial law enforcement initiatives.

Peter Arellano says he has never been part of a gang, but he had been subject to an Echo Park gang injunction along with his father, until he was removed as part of an ACLU lawsuit last year. He is shown in an updated photo. (Credit: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

In a 22-page order issued Thursday, Chief U.S. District Judge Virginia A. Phillips ruled that the American Civil Liberties Union is likely to prove that most of those subject to the remaining injunctions suffered a due process violation, since the city did not give them an opportunity to challenge the civil restraining orders in court.

The city’s use of injunctions has been under increasing scrutiny since 2016, when the ACLU and the Los Angeles Youth Justice Coalition filed a lawsuit against the city.

Following an audit by the Los Angeles city attorney’s office and the LAPD, 7,300 people were released last year from the conditions of the injunctions, which are civil court orders that can restrict someone from associating with friends, or even family members, in neighborhoods considered to be havens for certain street gangs.

Read the full story on LATimes.com

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