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Closing Argument
Police Tactics at Some Pro-Palestine Protests Ignore Past Lessons
News and Awards
Susan Chira to Step Down as The Marshall Project’s Editor-in-Chief in January
Closing Argument
When Bad Cops Become Private Security Guards
Life Inside
May 10
A Rare Bright Spot for a Canine Lover Doing Time: Raising Puppies to Become Service Dogs
Adam Roberts reflects on the highs and occasional lows of training Labrador retrievers for the Puppies Behind Bars program.
By
Adam Roberts
News and Awards
May 6
The Marshall Project Wins the Dart Award for “The Mercy Workers”
Our feature on mitigation specialists who help save people from the death penalty was recognized for making “significant contributions to public understanding of trauma-related issues.”
By
The Marshall Project
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Donald Trump
New York
The People v. Donald J. Trump
Texas
Protest
migrants
Immigration
Pro-Palestinian protests
Closing Argument
May 4
Weinstein Ruling Poses Quandary: Can #MeToo Coexist With Protections for Defendants?
Proving sex crimes often requires evidence that is generally excluded to protect the rights of the accused.
By
Susan Chira
Jackson
May 2
Mississippi Lawmakers Considered Modest Public Defense Reforms. They Rejected All of Them.
With its refusal to impose oversight or consistent standards in local defense, Mississippi risks falling further behind the rest of the U.S., critics say.
By
Caleb Bedillion
Feature
May 1
In This Police Youth Program, a Trail of Sexual Abuse Across the U.S.
Explorer posts, overseen by the Boy Scouts, are supposed to foster an interest in policing. They have faced nearly 200 allegations of misconduct.
By
Lakeidra Chavis
,
Daphne Duret
and
Joseph Neff
Analysis
April 30
How Campus Protests Could Shape the 2024 Elections — And Not Just the Presidency
With hundreds of arrests and more campus standoffs looming, local law enforcement officials could face consequences at the ballot box.
By
Maurice Chammah
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
Meet the Cops Running the NYPD’s 86-Member PR Team
Editorial: California blew it on bail reform. Now Illinois is leading
How Gun Violence Spread Across Columbus, Ohio
Juvenile detention abuse allegations are on the rise around the country : NPR
WikiLeaks' Julian Assange wins right to appeal U.S. extradition
Opinion
Under Glenn Youngkin, Parole in Virginia Has Nearly Vanished
Life in legal limbo: navigating Chicago’s immigration court alone
Despite arrests and injuries, six NYC college students say they would protest ag : NPR
Why Prisons, and the Public, Need Incarcerated Writers
ShotSpotter Showdown Set Amid Fierce Debate Over Value of Gunshot Detection System
AP Investigation: In hundreds of deadly police encounters, officers broke multiple safety guidelines
State moved migrant families to hotels with sex offenders
After prosecution rests, Trump lawyers ask judge to dismiss hush money trial
Closing Argument
April 27
They Killed Their Abusive Partners. Now Their Sentences Could Be Reconsidered.
Oklahoma could re-examine how it punishes people whose crimes came after years of domestic abuse. Other states may follow.
By
Christie Thompson
and
Cary Aspinwall
Life Inside
April 26
What Being Trans in Prison Is Really Like
Amid a wave of anti-trans legislation, and the violence that often follows, four people share their experiences in the criminal justice system.
By
Beth Schwartzapfel
Closing Argument
April 20
The Enduring Use of Solitary, and New Proposed Limits That Will Likely Fail (Again)
Isolation’s damaging effects are widely known. But many facilities confine people — even youth — virtually all day, sometimes in shower stalls.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Analysis
April 18
Officials Failed to Act When COVID Hit Prisons. A New Study Shows the Deadly Cost.
People in prison died at 3.4 times the rate of the free population, with the oldest hit hardest. New data holds lessons for preventing future deaths.
By
Anna Flagg
,
Jamiles Lartey
and
Shannon Heffernan