The ACLU is challenging a state law that allows children to be taken away from their parents without proof that they’re in immediate danger.
Claire Zimmerman says she hopes the lawsuit will make sure what happened to her family never happens to anyone else.
Three years ago, Zimmerman’s son, who was seven at the time, was at a Tiger game. Her husband, Christopher Ratté, unknowingly bought their son a bottle of lemonade with alcohol, and in the ninth inning they were approached by a security guard, who asked Ratté whether he knew his son was drinking an alcoholic beverage. Ratté said no, but the police were called. The boy was taken into the state’s custody later that day.
The state refused to release the boy to Zimmerman, even though she was not at the game with her son, and the next day he was placed in a foster home, where he stayed for three days.
Zimmerman says the ordeal was a nightmare:
"(It's) very difficult not to know where your child is physically. We of course felt that we had really let him down."
ACLU-Michigan Legal Director Michael Steinberg says if the boy’s parents had not been University of Michigan professors with access to the school’s legal resources, they might have been separated from their son for much longer:
"Families without the resources of our clients are sometimes unjustly separated for weeks, if not months."
The lawsuit asks a federal judge to declare Michigan’s law unconstitutional because it violates parents’ rights to due process.