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Redemption Songs
B. Alexis Is the First Woman to Drop an Album From Prison. But We Can’t Say Her Real Name.
Closing Argument
Mercy or Money: How to Grapple With a Rapidly Aging Prison Population
Life Inside
My Long Hair Isn’t a Vanity Project. It’s My Last Connection to Life Outside
The Marshall Project
News
March 18
ICE Has Abruptly Deported Thousands of Kids. Their Families Say It Traumatized Them.
Families left behind keepsakes, medicine, pets, cars and homes, sometimes leaving the U.S. with little more than the clothes on their backs.
By
Shannon Heffernan
,
Jesse Bogan
and
Anna Flagg
Closing Argument
March 14
How Hospitals Helped Erode Reproductive Rights
Criminal prosecutions sparked by hospital drug testing helped advance the legal concept that the fetus had interests the state could protect.
By
Shoshana Walter
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Department of Homeland Security
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
ICE
Department of Justice
Immigration Detention
Immigration
Legislative Reform
Life Inside
March 13
Alabama Almost Executed Charles ‘Sonny’ Burton. His Daughter Tells Her Story.
Justice has long been as elusive as Bigfoot, Carolyn Amanda Shavers writes. But when Alabama’s governor spared her dad’s life, she caught a glimpse.
By
Carolyn Amanda Shavers
Analysis
March 13
Public Records Shed Light on the Justice System — But it Can Be a Battle to Get Them
The government has stalled on FOIAs for years in some cases. In others, agencies have said public records will cost thousands of dollars.
By
Katie Moore
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
Feature
March 10
When Texas Was Fertile Ground for Prison Bands
Until the 1980s, an annual prison rodeo offered a chance for men inside to perform and sell albums. Now we’re making them available to you.
By
Maurice Chammah
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
The Hypnosis That Helped Send A Man To Death Row
Remembering Robert Mueller
Maryland’s struggle to find top prosecutors for its smallest counties
Texan seeks execution stay after codefendant’s murder confession
How to Fix DHS
Vermont police defend officers' conduct during federal immigration operation
Justices side with officer accused of excessive force against peaceful protester
White-collar lawyers’ newest gig: Representing people in the Epstein files
Where Left and Right Both Go Wrong on Crime
A Brooklyn murder case tests new anonymous jury law as online threats grow more common
Supreme Court Appears Poised to Reject Late-Arriving Mail-In Ballots Law
700 Dogs and Cats Are Rescued in Animal Cruelty Raid in Los Angeles County
Supreme Court case could smuggle Trump’s voter suppression bill into law.
No officers will be disciplined after protesters falsely charged as gang members
Trump Has Detained the Parents of More Than 11,000 U.S. Citizen Kids — ProPublica
Inside the Arrest That Led to Banksy’s Possible Unmasking Decades Later
The Dethroning of Cesar Chavez
Lawsuit: Aramark Serves Inedible Meals to Boost Snack Sales
ICE spent $200 million on two Georgia warehouses. Did they overpay?
St. Louis
March 10
Missouri Man Said DNA Test Could Prove Innocence. He Was Executed Before a Court Ruled.
Lance Shockley died by lethal injection last year. State courts have rejected prisoners’ requests for DNA testing in recent years.
By
Katie Moore
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
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