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The Last 12 Weeks
What If I Follow You Around?
The Last 12 Weeks
A New Witness Shares a Surprising Theory
The Last 12 Weeks
The Defense Lawyers Approach a Victim’s Mother
The Last 12 Weeks
Meeting David Wood — And One of His Victims
The Last 12 Weeks
The Countdown to David Wood’s Execution Date
The Marshall Project
Feature
June 17
‘Rejected’: How Federal Prisons Stonewall Grievances and Deny Care for Years
A law forces people in federal prisons to file grievances before they can sue in court. But less than 2% of filings are granted.
By
Christie Thompson
,
Ilica Mahajan
,
Anna Flagg
and
Joseph Shapiro
News and Awards
June 16
‘The Last 12 Weeks:’ a New Podcast From The Marshall Project and NYTimes’ Serial Productions
Host Maurice Chammah takes you behind the scenes as a death penalty defense team races to try to stop an execution 30 years in the making.
By
The Marshall Project
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Department of Justice
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Immigration Detention
Death Penalty
Florida
ICE
Supreme Court
Sending Kites
June 16
How to Parent From Prison
Incarcerated people from around the country share their advice.
By
Aala Abdullahi
and
Tammy Galarza
Redemption Songs
June 14
‘Forty-Four Hammers’ Is Part of a Rich History of Prison Work Songs
The call-and-response song was one of many that Black men sang as they toiled on Southern prison farms.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
June 13
Why the Way We Understand the South Matters — Especially in Criminal Justice
In a special edition of Closing Argument, Jamiles Lartey reflects on the region as the nation’s 250th celebration approaches.
By
Jamiles Lartey
News
June 9
25 Babies and Toddlers Are in ICE Custody on an Average Day
On an average day under Trump, ICE has 25 children aged 3 or younger in custody. In total, at least 500 babies and toddlers have been detained.
By
Anna Flagg
,
Shannon Heffernan
,
Kay Guerrero
and
Jacob Soboroff
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
Rex Heuermann Gets Life After Searing Victim Testimony
Congressional staff visit prison facility where Ghislaine Maxwell is held
Adoptee threatened with deportation to Iran granted asylum
Newsom says he’s Trump’s next target. DOJ’s record makes that harder to dismiss.
Illinois Town Loses a Prison, Leaving Residents Worried About Jobs
Mississippi Officer Shoots, Kills 1-Year-Old Child in Senatobia
A North Carolina Sheriff and ICE Ally Faces Accusations of Racism—and a Challenger This Fall
California commission seeks to fix broken public defense system
The Troubling Disappearance of ‘El Gallito’
How Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine should followup his call to end the death penalty
Presidential Discretion and the Insurrection Act
The Supreme Court Might Fix Something for Once
The Fiasco Hanging Over Todd Blanche’s Confirmation Hearing
Magistrate Judges and Federal Seizures of Election Records
Trump delays Jay Clayton's nomination for intel director
Ex-Addison County sheriff: ‘You can have my certification’
Louisiana watches closely as Supreme Court stops nitrogen execution in Alabama • Louisiana Illuminator
Colorado expands due process protections in asset forfeiture cases
New research: How past incarceration affects people later in life
Jackson
June 9
They Spent Years in Solitary Confinement in Mississippi Despite Suicide Risk
For decades, MDOC has regularly held incarcerated people in solitary confinement for weeks, months — and in some cases — years at a time.
By
Daja E. Henry
,
Mina Corpuz
, and
Grant McLaughlin
Jackson
June 8
They Asked for Help. Instead, They Died in Solitary.
An investigation found there were at least 47 suicides in solitary confinement in Mississippi, where cries for mental health care were met with isolation and punishment.
By
Daja E. Henry
and
Mina Corpuz
Redemption Songs
June 7
The San Quentin Prison Album That Should Have Been a Classic
Ike White’s “Changin’ Times” spans soul, rock, pop and jazz. On its 50th anniversary, it’s finally getting its due.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
June 6
How The Supreme Court Is Tightening Early Prison Release
In recent decisions, the justices restricted the bipartisan First Step Act that President Donald Trump signed in his first term.
By
Jamiles Lartey