Menu icon
The Marshall Project
Nonprofit journalism about criminal justice
Search
About
Newsletters
Donate
A nonprofit news organization covering the U.S. criminal justice system
Search
Magnifying glass
Local Network
Cleveland
Jackson
St. Louis
Projects
Inside Story
News Inside
Life Inside
Mauled
The Language Project
The Record
Dying Behind Bars
Remember Me
Redemption Songs
Topics
Death Penalty
Immigration
Juvenile Justice
Mental Health
Policing
Politics & Trump
Prison & Jail Conditions
Prosecuting Pregnancy
About
About Us
Local Network
The Marshall Project Inside
News & Awards
Impact
People
Supporters
Jobs
Contact Us
Investigate This!
Newsletters
Events
Donate
Feedback?
Arrow
support@themarshallproject.org
Cleveland
State Reverses Course, Finds Cuyahoga Jail Staff Failed to Start CPR in Wade’s Death
Feature
Grievances in Federal Prison Rarely Succeed. Here’s How Prisoners Would Change That.
Sending Kites
The Prison Rules You Won’t Find in Any Handbook
The Marshall Project
Feature
July 13
In Federal Prisons, Some Guards Use Fear and Violence to Stifle Complaints
Prisoners in federal facilities must file most grievances with the guards — a system they say exposes them to retaliation, including physical abuse.
By
Christie Thompson
and
Joseph Shapiro
Redemption Songs
July 12
An Opera Explores the Strain of Prison on a Marriage
In “9131,” incarcerated composer Joseph Wilson depicts a wife’s infidelity while her husband is up for parole.
By
Maurice Chammah
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
ICE
Deadly Force
Department of Justice
Lorenzo Salgado Araujo
ICE shooting in Houston (July 2026)
Houston, Texas
Closing Argument
July 11
How Helping Detectives Led a Florida Woman to ICE Detention
Non-traditional state agencies, from college police to wildlife protection, have been pulled into immigration enforcement.
By
Shoshana Walter
Cleveland
July 9
We Asked Ohio’s Death Row What They Think of Governor’s Death Penalty Reversal
Like Gov. Mike DeWine, most agreed the death penalty is broken and does not deter crime, but not always with the same reasoning.
By
Doug Livingston
,
Brittany Hailer
and
Beth Schwartzapfel
The Frame
July 9
Made in America: The Products of U.S. Prison Labor Are All Around Us
A project by photographer Daniella Zalcman shows the casual prevalence of goods made by prison labor in public and private spaces.
Photographs and text by
Daniella Zalcman
Redemption Songs
July 5
A Timely Remix of ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ Out of a New York Prison
The Capitol riots angered Sing Sing’s Alfred Roberts. He responded with his version of what is widely known as the Black national anthem.
By
Maurice Chammah
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
Security footage shows moments before and after ICE agents shot man in Biddeford
Attorney General Pick Todd Blanche Faces Headwinds in Senate
ICE Held a Minor in Adult Detention for Nearly Two Months, Attorneys Allege
Man, 74, set to be oldest inmate executed in modern Florida history
Former Orleans District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro appointed to the state Judiciary Commission, worrying advocates of criminal justice reform
A pattern of shootings by federal agents in Memphis nods to a worrying trend : NPR
Incarcerated women to move into new Rapid City prison to alleviate overcrowding
Zantop murders killer resentenced to at least 45 years in prison
Todd Blanche’s War Against Journalism
ICE’s New Permanent Family Separation: Killing Latino Fathers
What does the Trump Administration Statement on Dismantling the ICC Really Mean?
Opinion
Just Because I’m Incarcerated Doesn’t Mean I’m a Bad Mother
Supreme court justices testify to House on budget request to increase security
ICE contractor to open new Colorado detention center in Hudson
Mexico’s President Sheinbaum Refuses to Arrest Political Allies — ProPublica
How a Gang of Thieves Pulled Off a Multimillion-Dollar Data Center Heist
The Onion’s Alex Jones Infowars ploy with Tim Heidecker is a gloriously deranged parody.
Closing Argument
July 4
From Public Flogging to Flock Cameras: How the U.S. Justice System Evolved Over 250 Years
As the nation celebrates two and a half centuries of independence, we put together a syllabus of some essential criminal justice reading.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
July 3
What, to the Immigrant, Is Your Fourth of July?
In the spirit of Frederick Douglass’ landmark speech — and America at 250 — immigrants explain what Independence Day means to them.
By
Reem Akkad
,
Jesse Bogan
,
Daphne Duret
,
Katie Moore
,
Akiba Solomon
and
Lauren Villagran
News
July 1
A Dying Dream: How Trump Targets Immigrants Who Arrived as Children
Polls say Americans support protecting DACA recipients from deportation. Now some are being detained.
By
Lauren Villagran
Redemption Songs
June 28
With ‘Live on Death Row,’ Rapper Rrome Alone Condemns the Death Penalty
“Every life hinges on poverty, gender and race,” he declares in the 2024 song, “and the pay of the attorney defending your case.”
By
Maurice Chammah