More than 77 million Americans are subject to collateral consequences that limit, if not strip, a staggering range of political, civil, and social rights. There are 44,788 collateral consequences codified into law in the United States today. Twenty-nine percent of these laws are indefinite collateral sanctions that are automatically enforced without any durational limit. A federal judge recently found that today’s collateral consequences “amount to a form of civil death and send the unequivocal message that ‘they’ [ex- offenders] are no longer part of ‘us.’” These laws disproportionately devastate minority communities, perpetuating inequality by relegating millions of Americans to second class status. Collateral consequences have become one...