Calling Laguna Beach worthy of “the Scrooge award” and alleging that the city “has declared war on the homeless,” the ACLU of Southern California has launched what representatives say is a historic legal challenge to city enforcement of anti-sleeping laws and other measures against homeless disabled people.
The ACLU — joined by Constitutional scholar Erwin Chemerinsky of the new UCI School of Law — filed the lawsuit Tuesday morning in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana on behalf of five homeless disabled people who allege mistreatment from Laguna Beach police: Mark Sipprelle, Helen Ayres, Felipe Ruiz, Robert Carmichael and Paul Ishak — all of whom are identified as disabled homeless residents of Laguna Beach.
“This is the first lawsuit of its kind in the U.S. and seeks to enjoin the criminalization of homelessness against the mentally ill and physically disabled homeless,” said Mark Rosenbaum, legal director of the ACLU of Southern California, during a Tuesday morning news conference.