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Closing Argument
Why Firing the Prison Guards Involved in Robert Brooks’ Death Is Neither Quick Nor Easy
Closing Argument
Incarcerated Firefighters Do Risky, Low-Pay Work. Many Say It’s The Best Job Behind Bars.
Analysis
‘Was This Fair?’ People Behind Bars React to Trump’s Sentencing
News and Awards
January 10
The Marshall Project: Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, 2024
As our organization grows larger and more diverse, we work to expand the language we use to tell our story.
By
The Marshall Project
Life Inside
January 10
Motherhood Made Me Even More of a Prison and Police Abolitionist
In this excerpt from “We Grow the World Together: Parenting Toward Abolition,” co-editor Maya Schenwar names an unexpected source of wisdom: children.
By
Maya Schenwar
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Donald Trump
Department of Justice
election interference
Jack Smith
United States v. Donald Trump (D.C.)
Sentencing
New York
January 2021 Insurrection
Closing Argument
January 4
‘Perverse’ Incentives: How Local Governments Might Cash In on Trump’s Migrant Detention
Some local officials see President-elect Donald Trump’s promise of mass deportations as an answer to their budget woes.
By
Shannon Heffernan
Closing Argument
December 21, 2024
While Youth Detention Numbers Rise, States Begin to Roll Back Reforms
Los Angeles County is one of many places that have struggled to maintain safe conditions for youth and seen reform efforts stall or be abandoned.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
December 20, 2024
Cops Took My Christmas Bike. Now I Give Kids the Freedom To Ride.
For formerly incarcerated activist Dorsey Nunn, the most wonderful time of the year is a holiday bicycle giveaway for kids with parents in prison.
By
Dorsey Nunn
Cleveland
December 19, 2024
Relief Coming to Ohio Drivers Suspended Over Lack of Money
A Marshall Project and News 5 investigation inspired a bipartisan bill to address the license suspension crisis affecting hundreds of thousands of Ohioans.
By
Mark Puente
, The Marshall Project, and
Tara Morgan
, News 5 Cleveland
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
Special Counsel Report on Trump Election Case
New Orleans attack block-by-block: How security failed in Bourbon Street
After Trump’s Pardon, Paul Manafort Is Back and Looking for Foreign Work
Three major takeaways we learned from ‘Dismissed,’ NBC News’ investigation into how few violent sex crimes end in a conviction
Notorious Chicago cops tied to nearly $34 million more in proposed settlements
A Mississippi police officer has been suspended without pay after a chase that led to 3 deaths
Denver officials spent 2024 welcoming immigrants — but with less fanfare, police arrested some of them for low-level crimes and prostitution
Kristi Noem Sent Troops to Border, but Not to Flood Victims in South Dakota
Florida appeals court rejects ‘sex predator’ label rule for driver’s licenses
Police Unions’ Damning Silence on Trump’s Plan to Pardon Cop Beaters
Reckless Driving Isn’t Just a Design Problem
Opinion
Aileen Cannon Interfering with Chuck Grassley and Dick Durbin's Constitutional Duty
Trump’s Real Felony Sentence: The Jury’s Verdict Hasn’t Been Erased
Hunter Biden special counsel report defends tax, gun charges
Educators worry about how to talk immigration with families facing mass deportations
A Tale of Two Justice Systems: Only Trump Gets Convicted of 34 Felonies and Receives No Punishment
Federal Court Blocks Transfer of Guantánamo Convict to Prison in Iraq
Group of House Republicans unveil the ‘Abolish the ATF Act’
Cleveland
December 19, 2024
How a 1963 Cleveland Case Shaped Stop-and-Frisk Police Tactics, and Why It Still Matters
Under Cleveland’s consent decree, police have to track each stop.
By
Brittany Hailer
and
Rachel Dissell
Feature
December 17
Dozens of Prisoners Allege a Culture of Violence by Guards at Federal Facility in Virginia
In lawsuits and interviews, people held at Lee penitentiary described correctional officers breaking teeth, fracturing ribs and using the N-word.
By
Christie Thompson
Cleveland
December 17
You Can See Who Is in Many Ohio Jails With a Few Clicks — Just Not in Cuyahoga County
The sheriff’s department lags behind other agencies by failing to offer a website to help the public quickly learn who’s inside its notorious county jail.
By
Mark Puente
, The Marshall Project,
Nora McKeown
, Spectrum News 1
Feature
December 16
What I Learned From a Year of Reading Letters From Prisoners
The Marshall Project receives nearly 3,000 letters a year from people behind bars. Each one tells a different story about the system’s harms.
By
Aala Abdullahi