Press Releases

Supreme Court of Virginia rules that people with mixed sentences are ineligible for enhanced sentence credits

The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed the VADOC's interpretation of budget language that restricted eligibility for expanded earned sentence credits. Our cases on inchoate offenses remain pending.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

ACLU of Virginia files two new cases calling for VADOC to release people who have earned sentence credits

Today the ACLU of Virginia filed two new cases challenging the Virginia Department of Corrections’ (VADOC) refusal to award expanded sentence credits to people with certain convictions, unlawfully extending their incarceration. 
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

Youngkin administration’s disenfranchisement of thousands of Virginians is both unprecedented and unconstitutional

The Virginia Department of Elections released its Annual List Maintenance Report last week detailing the cancellation of the voting rights of 17,368 Virginians convicted of a new felony after their voting rights had been restored.

Budget establishing oversight of Virginia Department of Corrections is long overdue

"Neither the public, the media, nor even elected officials really know what goes on behind prison walls. That’s why lawmakers’ first step towards creating meaningful oversight of VADOC is so significant," said ACLU of Virginia Policy and Advocacy Strategist Shawn Weneta.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

Supreme Court of Virginia finds VADOC unlawfully keeping Steven Prease in prison

Today the Supreme Court of Virginia issued a ruling in Prease v. Clarke, finding that the Virginia Department of Corrections (VDOC) unlawfully extended Mr. Prease’s incarceration by withholding earned sentence credits that he earned while in prison.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

Lawsuit alleges Virginia’s Constitution’s felony disenfranchisement provision violates Reconstruction-era federal law

Protect Democracy, ACLU of Virginia, and WilmerHale filed a first-of-its-kind lawsuit in federal court challenging the Virginia Constitution’s felony disenfranchisement. The case claims that Virginia is in violation of the 150-year-old federal law that established the terms of Virginia’s readmission
Court Cases: King v. Youngkin

Hundreds of Virginians held in prolonged solitary confinement join ACLU of Virginia class action lawsuit

A federal judge allowed hundreds of Virginians in prolonged solitary confinement to join our lawsuit against the Virginia Department of Corrections.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

ACLU-VA submits letter urging Gov. Youngkin to amend solitary legislation

On March 7, 2023, the ACLU of Virginia submitted a letter on behalf of fifteen additional organizations to Governor Youngkin urging him not to sign legislation on solitary confinement currently on his desk.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform

Lawmakers fail to advance bipartisan Second Look bill

ACLU-VA's statement on House committee killing a bipartisan criminal legal reform bill that would establish a means for incarcerated people who have already served at least 15 years of their sentence to petition their sentencing judge for a Second Look at their sentence.
Issue Areas: Criminal Legal Reform