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Cleveland
‘It Was Chaos’: How an Ohio Youth Treatment Center Tried to Put an End to Rising Violence
By
Brittany Hailer
Closing Argument
November 8
The Competing Visions to Fix the Country’s Juvenile Justice Crisis
Some states keep adding beds in already troubled facilities, while others are trying alternative approaches to detention or keeping some children out of the system altogether.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Jackson
November 4
Tree Hanging Death at Delta State University Raises Dread of Mississippi’s Past Lynchings
A Black freshman’s apparent suicide on campus is one of at least nine Black men who have been found hanging from trees since 2000.
By
Lici Beveridge
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
ICE
Chicago, Illinois
Immigration
Department of Justice
Operation Midway Blitz
Immigration Detention
Q&A
November 4
A Leading Prison Journalist Upends Our Obsession With True Crime
John J. Lennon tells Bill Keller that he “wanted to tell a different story about the guilty” in his new book.
By
Bill Keller
Analysis
November 4
Trump Says Federal Deployments Make Cities Safer. Local Officials Disagree.
In Chicago, Memphis and elsewhere, residents allege a surge of federal agents and military troops is making it harder to police and prosecute crime.
By
Beth Schwartzapfel
Closing Argument
November 1
Who Should Pay Victims of Police Misconduct? Only the Officers, Some Cities Say.
Denver, Minneapolis and other cities want to avoid paying large sums owed to victims of some types of misconduct. But will the officers pay up?
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
October 31
The Last Words of a Man Who Died in Prison From a Treatable Cancer
Months before his death, Ralph Marcus explained how a COVID-era leg injury led to a rare bone cancer that didn’t have to be fatal.
By
Ralph Marcus
as told to
Carla Canning
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
The justices to consider compassionate-release statute
Hundreds of Thousands of Anonymous Deportees
Gregory Bovino and Border Patrol agents plan to leave Chicago area, sources say
Justice Department struggles as thousands exit – and few are replaced
Then They Came for the Dreamers – Mother Jones
Harold Wayne Nichols faces lethal injection after declining execution choice
Cook County to pay $10M to men wrongly convicted in 1994 slaying
Voters Ousted This Pennsylvania Sheriff After He Signed Up to Collaborate With ICE
Over 50 suspects nabbed in child exploitation investigation
Gov. Murphy's plan to keep NJ parole violators out of prison stalled • New Jersey Monitor
Fernandez v. United States
Opinion
What’s Up With the Terror Indictment Against Alleged Antifa Members?
DOJ has big hearing in “Trump Enemy’’ prosecution. Judge not pleased.
Opinion
Spending Bill Would Pave Way for Senators to Sue Over Phone Searches
The daylight between Mamdani and Tisch as NYPD leadership choice looms
Not All Prisoners Get Fed Daily. Here, It Depends on How Fast You Can Run.
The Rabbit Hole: Inside the arrest of a purported L.A. Mobster
Alex Karp Goes to War
Cleveland
October 30
Cuyahoga Sheriff Backs Off Tasha Grant Investigation Amid Family Criticism
Trumbull County sheriff will now lead the investigation into the Cleveland woman’s restraint death, meeting family demands for independent probe.
By
Mark Puente
,
Brittany Hailer
and
Doug Livingston
St. Louis
October 30
‘Lost’ in Missouri Jail Cells
A backlog of defendants deemed mentally unfit for trial persists despite public policy changes to address the crisis.
By
Jesse Bogan
Feature
October 30
Their Loved Ones Died Behind Bars. These Keepsakes Are All They Have Left.
Five families reflect on the possessions they got back, and the ones they didn’t.
By
Aala Abdullahi
and
Shannon Heffernan
Feature
October 29
These Families Wanted to Lay Their Loved Ones to Rest. They Had to Bring Them Home From Prison First.
Policies that dictate what happens after a death behind bars often add new layers of pain — and financial and logistical challenges — for those left behind.
By
Aala Abdullahi