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Analysis
Public Records Shed Light on the Justice System — But it Can Be a Battle to Get Them
Feature
When Texas Was Fertile Ground for Prison Bands
St. Louis
Missouri Man Said DNA Test Could Prove Innocence. He Was Executed Before a Court Ruled.
The Marshall Project
News and Awards
March 11
The Marshall Project Hires Reem Akkad as Managing Editor
Akkad, veteran of The Washington Post, becomes key leader of investigative newsroom.
By
The Marshall Project
Closing Argument
March 7
The Troubling Personal Side of Public Surveillance
Law enforcement cameras are popping up everywhere, but many agencies have little safeguards to prevent abuse by individual officers.
By
Jamiles Lartey
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration Detention
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Department of Homeland Security
Department of Justice
ICE
Immigration
Kristi Noem
Life Inside
March 6
Mom’s Last Gun
My mother has severe mental illness. Our family has spent decades trying to keep her from using firearms to hurt herself and others.
By
Kelli Caldwell
St. Louis
March 5
Why Missouri Prisons Can Be Deadly for People With Opioid Addictions
In a prison system rife with drugs, a new civil rights lawsuit accuses the Missouri DOC of punishing people for addiction, rather than treating it.
By
Ivy Scott
News Inside
March 5
Women on the Inside
News Inside Issue 22 takes a hard look at how incarcerated women face unique challenges — and why their stories deserve to be heard.
By
Lawrence Bartley
Analysis
March 3
It’s Dangerous to Feel This Desperate: How to Ease the Chaos in New York’s Prisons
When the governor doesn’t commute sentences, and the legislature won’t act, the carrot-and-stick system of rehabilitation disintegrates.
By
John J. Lennon
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
Kansas town is allowing CoreCivic to reopen prison to house immigrants
ICE Locked Up a Deaf Kid Without His Hearing Aids—And Wouldn’t Let Him Have Them Back – Mother Jones
On the advice of Klonsel: A look under the hood of an Alabama injustice
DOJ's Alex Pretti shooting probe excludes prosecutors who specialize in civil rights cases, sources say
Arizona Is Now at the Center of Election Investigations
Jail-based voting: Mass. to produce reports after settlement
Disturbing video, revealing documents show how Indiana inmates burned alive — and why it could happen again | 13 Investigates
State Constitutions Could Bar State and Local Police Collaboration with ICE
The Oscars in Solitary Confinement
Why DOJ Hasn’t Charged Anyone Else From the Epstein Files
Opinion: Youth Incarceration is a Public Health Crisis
Violent Crime and Punitiveness: An Empirical Study of Public Opinion by Michael M. O'Hear, Darren Wheelock :: SSRN
DOJ losing experienced counterterrorism minds at a critical time, say current and former officials
Trump DOJ restores felons’ gun rights, indicted AZ lawmaker included
DHS Ousts CBP Privacy Officers Who Questioned ‘Illegal’ Orders
Hip-Hop Icons Tell Justices That Texas Turned Rap Lyrics Into a Death Warrant
Islamophobic Think Tank Helped Write ICE Protest Terror Indictment
News
March 2
The Harrowing Journey Home for Families Leaving Immigration Detention
Parents and children from a detention center in Texas found themselves dropped at a border town shelter with few means to leave.
By
Shannon Heffernan
,
Jesse Bogan
and
Anna Flagg
Closing Argument
February 28
As Texas Restricts Cashless Bail, More People Will Be Jailed for Months Based on an Accusation
Despite evidence that cashless bail doesn’t increase crime, several states are moving to restrict it.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
February 27
The Documentary ‘Exodus’ Paints a Nuanced Picture of Life After Lockup
Shot over two years, the Critics’ Choice-nominated film values quiet moments. “We’re trying to refuse a spectacle,” says director Nimco Sheikhaden.
By
Aala Abdullahi
Jackson
February 26
Mississippi’s Black Voters Brace for Elections Ruling That Could Gut Supreme Court Clout
Black Mississippians won a Voting Rights Act case that challenges how the state elects supreme court justices. But that victory may be in jeopardy.
By
Caleb Bedillion