KTLA

ACLU report alleges widespread abuse by law enforcement of homeless people in Lancaster

Derrick Chambers performs a count of homeless people at a Lancaster encampment during the 2016 homeless census. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

A report released Monday by the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California alleges widespread abuse of homeless people in the Mojave Desert city of Lancaster.

Sheriff’s deputies contracted by the city routinely push homeless people into the inhospitable desert, where they often face additional pressure from county officials, the report contends.


The report, “Banished and Abandoned,” describes a “dragnet of criminalization” within the city limits in which deputies and city code enforcement officers “regularly bulldoze encampments of unhoused people and order them to move by threat of citation.”

The actions push them out of the city into remote areas where they have to walk long distances for water and food, the report said.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.