Bio
Eunice Lee is currently a Detention Attorney at the ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project (IRP) in San Francisco. She previously served as the Albert M. Sacks Clinical Teaching and Advocacy Fellow at Harvard Law School's Immigration and Refugee Clinic; before that, she worked at ACLU IRP in New York as an Equal Justice Works Fellow. Eunice received her B.A. from Stanford University with honors and distinction and her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she was student director of Schell Center for International Human Rights and co-Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal. After graduating from law school, Eunice clerked for the Honorable Carlos F. Lucero of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. She is a candidate in the Ph.D. program in Anthropology at UC Berkeley.
Featured work
Oct 8, 2014
Federal Appeals Court Tells Obama Administration to Stop Imprisoning Immigrants for No Reason
Sep 26, 2014
DHS Argues It Has Evidence That Locking Up Immigrant Families Deters Migration. One Problem: It’s So Wrong.
May 22, 2014
Coast to Coast, Federal Courts Say NO to Mandatory Lock-up of Immigrants
Mar 13, 2014
Detained Immigrants Hungry for Justice, Literally
Jan 10, 2014
Judge Rules that Immigrants in Long-term Lock-up Have Rights