Photo: Savannah Kumar poses for a photo outdoors. She stands in front of a body of water with trees in the background.

Savannah Kumar

Pronouns: she, they

Staff Attorney

Legal

Bio

Savannah Kumar joined the ACLU of Texas’ legal department in 2020 as the Samuels Family Legal Fellow. Savannah largely focuses on using litigation to challenge the brutal practice of imprisonment and contest racial injustice in the criminal law system.

Prior to joining the ACLU of Texas, Savannah served as a New York Pro Bono Scholar in the Bronx Defenders’ Criminal Defense Practice and an associate with Texas RioGrande Legal Aid’s Telephone Access to Justice Project. During law school, Savannah also trained at: Brooklyn Defender Services’ Family Defense Practice, the Center for Court Innovation, and the Texas Civil Rights Project.

In law school, Savannah was a member of the Civil Rights and Immigration Clinics, served as a Public Service, Pro Bono, and Human Rights Scholar, published on solitary confinement and forced labor in the Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal, and served as a teaching assistant for a course on race and the law.

Raised primarily in the South, Savannah graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a B.A. and a J.D.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
travis county blog pic
  • Justice System and Carceral Reform|
  • +2 Issues

The Forcible Removal of Religious Headwear in Texas Jails Is Invasive and Unconstitutional

Being forced to remove religious headwear is devastating to our sense of dignity. The state has no role taking our religious freedom from us.
News & Commentary
Cars line up during the pandemic to vote by drive-thru
  • Voting Rights and Democracy|
  • +1 Issue

With Your Support, We Can Stop State-Sanctioned Voter Intimidation Tactics

House Bill 6 (HB 6) is no ordinary voter suppression bill. Not only would the proposed legislation make it much more difficult for Texans to vote, it would make voting potentially dangerous with a new series of extreme criminal penalties.