Taser Bill Signed Into Law

Vermont's first-in-the-nation statewide Taser training and use bill was signed into law Tuesday by Gov. Peter Shumlin. The law, had it been in effect in 2012, would have prevented the police Taser death of her son, Macadam Mason, said Mason's mother, Rhonda Taylor at the Statehouse signing. She praised legislators, Gov. Shumlin and his administration, law enforcement, and civil rights and mental health advocates for getting the at-times contentious bill over the finish line.

Rhonda Taylor

Our Privacy Pushed And Pulled From Us

Long waits at the border? Get finger-printed or iris-scanned and receive an easy-pass NEXUS card! Don't want your driver's license super-charged to a national identity REAL ID card? OK, but the Vermont DMV will take your Vermont driver's license and hand you back a Vermont Privilege Card! They say it's the same thing, but try using it to rent a car.

Border crossing

2014 Legislative Wrap-Up

Significant strides were made this year in the legislature around a number of civil liberties issues. Check out our quick rundown of the high points (as well as some disappointments). Details for each bill can be found on our full legislative report.

Statehouse galleery

Taser Bill Gets Final Legislative Approval

The House voted Thursday morning to accept the Senate's changes to H. 225, the Taser regulation bill. The bill will now go to Gov. Peter Shumlin for his approval. The House acceptance came on a unanimous voice vote, identical to the Senate's approval on Monday. The concurrence avoids a conference committee, which coming this late in the session could have meant defeat due to lack of time.

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Victory In Bogus Traffic Stop Case

Motorist Rod MacIver and the town of Shelburne have agreed to settle MacIver's case against police officer Jason Lawton on terms that take police oversight one step closer to reality for all Vermonters.

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Fight Back Against Mass Surveillance!

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Your Medical Records Are Already Out There

With no fanfare and public notice, many Vermonters' personal medical records have already been put into electronic databases controlled by the state and soon to be accessible to physicians and others working in hospitals and medical offices. While your consent is necessary for your records to be viewed legally, there is no electronic "lock" preventing unauthorized access -- just the threat of what have, in the past, often been weak sanctions meekly administered.

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Police Shootings Must Stop

It is hard to imagine a civil society where government officials shoot their own citizens dead. It is harder still to imagine a civil society where government officials don't want to shoot their citizens dead, nevertheless do, yet don't have a plan to stop doing so.

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'Profiling' Key Topic At Annual Meeting Saturday The work of a young Vermont filmmaker, DeWolfe Morrow of Montpelier, will provide a spring board for discussion of profiling at this year's American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont annual meeting Saturday, Nov. 9 at the National Life building in Montpelier.

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