← The Twilight Conscience

Resources

For those who intend to act. Legal contacts, know-your-rights, and frameworks for people who have decided that watching is no longer acceptable.

In Crisis Now ↓ Field Manuals ↓

If you are arrested — first calls

Write this on your arm before any action.

NLG National: (212) 679-5100

Mass defense / protest support: massdef@nlg.org

Your local NLG hotline: nlg.org/chapters/#massdefense

Say nothing until you have spoken to an attorney. You have this right regardless of citizenship status.

Start Here

National Lawyers Guild (NLG)

Phone: (212) 679-5100
Mass defense: massdef@nlg.org
Local chapters & hotlines: nlg.org/chapters/#massdefense
Attorney referral directory: nlg.org/referral-directory

The primary legal resource for direct action defense. They have a mass defense program specifically for people arrested during protest and direct action. They show up, they take the cases, they know the federal system. Find your local chapter — the regional hotline is staffed by attorneys who know your jurisdiction.

Federal Civil Rights

Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR)

Phone: (212) 614-6464
Website: ccrjustice.org

Handles federal civil rights cases. Has litigated directly against ICE and CBP. Takes cases other firms won't.

Civil Liberties

ACLU National

Phone: (212) 549-2500
Know your rights: aclu.org/know-your-rights/immigrants-rights

Can refer you to your state affiliate's legal intake. Extensive know-your-rights materials covering ICE stops, raids, right to remain silent, right to refuse consent to search.

Immigration Specific

RAICES

Website: raicestexas.org

Specific to Texas detention. Multilingual know-your-rights materials. Direct services for detained individuals and families.

Immigration Law

National Immigration Law Center (NILC)

Website: nilc.org

Federal immigration law analysis, detainee rights, policy tracking. Reference resource for understanding the legal framework of what is happening.

Freedom for Immigrants

Website: freedomforimmigrants.org

Detention monitoring, hotline, visitation network. Tracks conditions inside facilities.

Detention Watch Network

Website: detentionwatchnetwork.org

Facility-specific conditions reporting. Useful for understanding the specific landscape before acting.

Human Rights Watch — U.S. Detention

Website: hrw.org/united-states/detention

Documented reporting on conditions. Useful as reference and as evidence of what is known.

Habeas Corpus — 28 U.S.C. § 2241

The mechanism for challenging unlawful federal detention. A detained person or someone acting on their behalf can petition a federal court directly. This is the legal door.

Fourth Amendment

Protections against unreasonable search and seizure extend to non-citizens on U.S. soil. You do not surrender constitutional rights by being undocumented.

Zadvydas v. Davis (2001)

Supreme Court held that indefinite detention of non-citizens is unconstitutional. There are time limits. The government does not have unlimited authority to hold people.

42 U.S.C. § 1983 / Bivens Actions

Section 1983 allows civil rights claims against state actors. For federal agents, the equivalent is a Bivens action. These are the tools for accountability after harm is done.

Fifth Amendment — Right to Silence

You have the right to remain silent. This applies regardless of citizenship status. The only thing you are required to provide is identification in states with stop-and-identify laws. Say nothing else until you have an attorney.

1. Write the NLG number on your arm in permanent marker.
2. Find your local NLG chapter hotline at nlg.org/chapters/#massdefense.
3. Establish a contact person who knows your plan and timeline — someone who will make calls if you don't check in.
4. Consider a pre-action consultation with a civil rights attorney. Hypotheticals are not incriminating.
5. Document everything you witness. Civil rights claims live or die on documentation.
6. Know the distinction between obstruction and intervention — legally significant and often blurry in practice.

Written for you, not for the people helping you. Read these first.

Right Now

Immediate survival — warmth, water, trust, ICE contact, your rights. Read this first.

Moving vs. Staying

When stillness is safer than moving. How to read a route. What to do if separated.

Food With Nothing

Finding food with no money. What to eat first. Signs someone needs medical help.

Communicating Safely

How to reach people without exposing your location or theirs. Signal, SMS, no phone.

Aftercare

Trauma-informed field guide for immediate care of people in crisis.

Medical

Field medicine for non-clinicians — dehydration, malnutrition, refeeding, wounds, fever, panic, cardiac events.

Culture & Language

Being a safe presence across a language barrier — cultural context, key phrases, shame and dignity, what not to do.

Supply List

Full checklist — comfort, hygiene, food, medical, wound care, hemorrhage control, pregnancy and delivery, expression, and yours.

Training

What to learn before you go, in priority order.

If You Have a Child

When a child has no parent and no one else.

Sexual Assault

Field response for assault survivors — immediate care, medical windows, presentation, cultural context.

Death in Care

When someone dies while under your responsibility. Recognition, response, telling others, body dignity.

Impairment

Recognizing and managing your own degradation — sleep, exhaustion, flooding, hunger.

Suicidality

Recognizing risk, asking directly, levels of crisis, response, and after.

Infection Control

Preventing spread of communicable illness across a group — TB, GI, skin infections, your own exposure.

Group Triage

START triage for multiple casualties — who first, the permission to decide, and emotional triage for group psychological crisis.

Pregnancy & Labor

Complications, delivery if no other choice, premature birth, miscarriage.