City and County of Honolulu Sued Over Homeless Sweeps

More than a dozen homeless and formerly homeless individuals file class action lawsuit over City’s immediate destruction of property

Affiliate: ACLU of Hawaii
September 21, 2015 9:15 am

ACLU Affiliate
ACLU of Hawaii
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HONOLULU, HAWAI‘I – The American Civil Liberties Union of Hawai‘i Foundation (“ACLU”) and the law firm of Alston Hunt Floyd & Ing filed a classaction
lawsuit today against the City and County of Honolulu (“City”) in federal court. The lawsuit alleges that the City violated the United States Constitution
when it destroyed personal property belonging to the plaintiffs – who are or have been homeless – without due process of law.

The lawsuit alleges that instead of impounding and storing seized property and giving adequate opportunity to reclaim the items, property seized by City officials
was instead immediately destroyed. The lawsuit also alleges that no notice, receipt, or information regarding how property might be recovered was given to
the plaintiffs.

The lawsuit seeks stop the City from violating the Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights; end the practice of destroying personal property without following procedures;
and to require the City to pay damages and attorneys’ fees.

In just one unannounced sweep in Kaka’ako, on November 13, 2014, City officials seized and destroyed the Plaintiffs’ property, including their food,
childrenʻs toys, prescription medications, and government identification documents. In some cases, entire tents, obviously filled with personal
belongings, were thrown into a waiting garbage truck and crushed. City workers have repeatedly refused to allow property owners to retrieve necessary personal
belongings like medications and identification documents, instead threatening them with arrest if they interfere with the sweep. The City continues to violate the
Constitution in its sweeps, by announcing that it will immediately destroy certain items (like tarps and perishable food) and that it will arrest anyone who gets in
the way.

Attorney Kristin L. Holland, Of Counsel with the Law Firm of Alston, Hunt, Floyd and Ing, said: “The Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit the government
from seizing a person’s property and destroying it without due process, but that’s exactly what happened to the Plaintiffs. We will seek all available remedies for
our clients, and will work to ensure that these violations do not recur.”

ACLU Hawai‘i Legal Director Dan Gluck said: “The Constitution protects us all equally, regardless of who we are and whether we are rich or poor. Using arrests
to solve homelessness and destroying what little property a homeless individual has to survive is contrary to a fair and just community. All these policies do is set
families back and makes it harder for them to build productive lives.”

Plaintiff Tabatha Martin said: ““Like many people here, my husband and I are working hard. Weʻre saving up for a small apartment for us and our four-year-old
daughter. Every time the City comes and throws away our tents, or our clothes, or our IDs, they throw away our lives. We have to start all over again and pay to
replace those things. All of our savings are used up, keeping us on the street even longer.”

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