Amol Sinha Headshot

Amol Sinha

Pronouns: He/Him

Executive Director

Bio

Amol Sinha is a nationally recognized civil rights leader who has dedicated his career to advancing racial justice, holding institutions accountable, promoting and defending rights and liberties, and spearheading impactful work to protect our democracy.

As Executive Director of the ACLU of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ), Amol guides the organization's innovative integrated advocacy work, utilizing litigation, policy, public education, and strategic communications to build a more equitable society.

Since assuming leadership of the ACLU-NJ in 2017, Amol has driven the organization’s steady expansion, more than doubling its team of dedicated professionals and advocates, and growing its capacity to undertake critical advocacy campaigns, resulting in transformational change to New Jersey's civil rights landscape. During Amol's tenure, the ACLU-NJ has appeared before the New Jersey Supreme Court more times than any non-governmental party, deepened community partnerships across the state, and centered the experiences of directly impacted communities.

Amol’s dedication to protecting civil rights and liberties is exemplified in the ACLU-NJ’s years-long work around decarceration, providing new pathways for individuals to overcome the systemic injustices of our criminal justice system. The organization’s important work in this field has resulted in litigation and legislation that led to the early release of over 9,000 people from our state's prisons and jails, leading the successful fight to legalize cannabis through a racial justice lens, and leading the charge on New Jersey’s recent landmark categorical clemency initiative. Under his leadership, the ACLU-NJ has secured numerous wins across multiple issue areas, including access to drivers' licenses for all regardless of immigration status, preventing hundreds of deportations, securing the right to vote for people on probation and parole, and defending free speech for groups across a diverse array of viewpoints.

Prior to joining ACLU-NJ, Amol led state legislative campaigns at the Innocence Project, and prior to that, directed an office of the New York Civil Liberties Union. In 2024, Amol was elected by his fellow ACLU executive directors to serve as the Chair of the ACLU’s Nationwide Executive Director Council. He also is a Policy Fellow at Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs. He holds a B.A. from New York University and a J.D. from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
A collage including the face of President Donald Trump, a protest sign reading "Equal Rights for All", the NJ State House, a megaphone, and the American flag.
  • Free Speech & Expression|
  • +1 Issue

ACLU: The Rule of Law Is Non-Negotiable

If the nation's most powerful law firms and civil society organizations don't stand up for our rights and our democracy, who will?
News & Commentary
"Onward, Together." on blue with collage elements in background, including the NJ State Capital building, a photo of the U.S. Constitution.
  • Democracy & Civic Engagement|
  • +1 Issue

Our Roadmap to Protecting Democracy and Holding Trump Accountable

As the country faces a second Trump administration, the threats on rights and liberties grow by the day, but the ACLU is more prepared than ever to ensure Trump is held accountable for any policies that undermine individual freedoms.

Related Content

Press Release
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  • Immigrants' Rights

ACLU-NJ Responds to U.S. Supreme Court Ruling on Birthright Citizenship

Today’s Supreme Court ruling emboldens the Trump administration’s unconstitutional attacks on birthright citizenship at the expense of immigrant communities across the country.
Issue Areas: Immigrants' Rights
Press Release
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  • Free Speech & Expression|
  • +1 Issue

Mahmoud Khalil to Be Freed From Detention, Reunite With Wife and Son as Case Proceeds

Targeted by Trump administration for his advocacy in support of Palestinian rights, Mr. Khalil can go home to his family in New York after over three months in detention in rural Louisiana.