Know Your Rights Basics
Learn the key rights you and your community members have.
Know Your Rights Basics
Info
These rights apply to everyone in the U.S., regardless of immigration status.
Why This Matters
Knowing your rights reduces harm. In over 70% of wrongful detentions, people didnβt clearly assert legal protections they had. Learn them. Practice them. Teach others.
π These are based on U.S. law. Check local laws for any state-specific differences.
π Source: ACLU Immigrantsβ Rights Project β Detention and Due Process Reports, 2018β2020
Rabbit Hole
π Curious about the data? β Search: βACLU immigration detention due process statisticsβ
Your Core Rights
These are the most important rights to remember during an interaction with ICE or law enforcement:
- π You have the right to remain silent.
- πͺ You do not have to open the door unless they show a judicial warrant signed by a judge.
- β You have the right to refuse consent to a search of yourself, your phone, your bag, or your vehicle.
- π· You have the right to document public encounters, if itβs safe to do so.
- π£οΈ You have the right to ask: βAm I being detained, or am I free to go?β
- π§Ύ You have the right to an attorney β and to not sign anything without one.
Warning
Asserting your rights may not stop harm β but it builds a legal record and protects others.
Rabbit Hole
π§ Want to go deeper? Learn how the right to remain silent was shaped by Miranda v. Arizona. β Search: βMiranda rights origin Supreme Court 1966β
What Counts as a Warrant?
β Judicial Warrant
- Signed by a judge
- Lists specific name, address, or location
- Required for ICE to enter a home or any private area
- Applies to enclosed spaces not accessible to the public
β Administrative Warrant
- Signed by ICE or DHS staff
- NOT valid for forced entry or arrest
- You are not required to comply
πΈ Want to see the difference?
β Search: "I-200 vs judicial warrant image"
Rabbit Hole
π Public vs. Private Spaces
Know the boundary: sidewalks = public; backyards, private driveways, enclosed porches = private
β Learn more: βNILC Know Your Rights Private Areas Guideβ
Home, Street, Vehicle, Transit
Location | Can they search without a warrant? | What to say |
---|---|---|
Home | No β must have a judicial warrant | βI do not consent to entry.β |
Street | No β unless they have probable cause | βAm I being detained, or am I free to go?β |
Vehicle | No β unless they have probable cause | βI do not consent to a search.β |
Transit | No β unless a warrant or border power | βWhat law allows you to stop me here?β |
β οΈ Some states require ID in βStop-and-IDβ zones.
β Check this list to see if your state has one.
Rabbit Hole
πΊοΈ Explore ID Laws
Find out if your state has a Stop-and-ID requirement.
β Visit: βStop-and-ID state laws map Noloβ
How to Assert Your Rights
-
Use clear, respectful language:
βIβm choosing to remain silent.β
βI do not consent to a search.β
βI want to speak with a lawyer.β -
Never lie or present false documents.
-
Stay calm. Donβt run, argue, or resist physically.
-
Document the encounter if safe β or ask someone nearby to.
Important
Never sign anything ICE or police give you without a lawyer present.
Rabbit Hole
π¬ Practice Makes Power
Watch community roleplays of asserting your rights during a stop.
β Search: βKnow Your Rights roleplay video CUNY CLEARβ
Protecting Each Other
- πͺͺ Carry a Know Your Rights card (also called Red Cards) in English and Spanish.
β Can't buy one? Print a free version from ILRCβs KYR Cards or make your own on cardstock. - π± Set up an emergency contact and memorize the number.
- π Log what happened β date, time, location, officers, quotes.
- π€ Respect confidentiality. Do not post or share stories, locations, or photos without informed consent β even after the danger feels over.
Warning
Confidentiality saves lives. Assume everything is sensitive unless youβre told otherwise.
Rabbit Hole
βοΈ DIY KYR Tools
Make your own Know Your Rights cards using cardstock and scissors.
β Search: βPrintable Red Card immigrant rights ILRCβ
Sample Script if Approached at Home
βI do not consent to entry. Please slide any warrant under the door. I choose to remain silent and want a lawyer.β
Emergency Contact Drill
- Say: βI am remaining silent and asking for a lawyer.β
- Call: [Write down or memorize a trusted number]
- Repeat: βI do not consent to a search.β
If needed, write contact info on your arm with sharpie before actions.
Summary
Knowing your rights is only the first step β practicing them in community builds power. Review these regularly. Teach your group. Carry tools. Stay calm.
Success
You donβt need to be a lawyer to protect your rights β just informed and steady.
π Knowledge Check
Everyone in the U.S., regardless of immigration status, has constitutional rights.
What kind of warrant must ICE present to enter your home without permission?
Which of the following are rights you can assert during an encounter?
If law enforcement tries to search your bag without probable cause, what should you say?
An administrative warrant gives ICE legal authority to enter your home by force.
What should you do if ICE or police knock on your door without a signed judicial warrant?
How can you legally check whether youβre being detained?
If you are undocumented, you still have the right to remain silent.
What are safe ways to protect yourself and your community?
Itβs safer to lie to police than to remain silent.
What does a βStop-and-IDβ law allow police to do?
π« You must register and log in to mark this lesson as qualified. Registering helps us track progress, verify training, and build trust across our network.
You can use your Dispatch login here if you already created an account there. Likewise, creating an account here will let you use the same credentials on Dispatch.
Complete and pass the quiz above to unlock this button. Youβll need at least 80% correct.