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Closing Argument
Weinstein Ruling Poses Quandary: Can #MeToo Coexist With Protections for Defendants?
Feature
In This Police Youth Program, a Trail of Sexual Abuse Across the U.S.
Analysis
How Campus Protests Could Shape the 2024 Elections — And Not Just the Presidency
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
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 rest of the U.S., critics say.
By
Caleb Bedillion
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Protest
Pro-Palestinian protests
Students
Gaza
Israel
New York
Palestine
Columbia University
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
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
Inside the Columbia University Protests Over Israel and Gaza
Fireworks and Waterworks: Davidson and Hicks on the Stand
Jan. 6 defendant who 'fed' officer to Trump mob is sentenced to prison
Delinquent: Read all the stories from Week 1. Cuyahoga County sends more kids to adult prison than any other county. Why?
Chicago Police won’t discipline nine officers with extremist group ties
Texas man files legal action to probe ex-partner’s out-of-state abortion
New Hampshire found liable for abuse at youth detention center
How Do You Repurpose a Closed Jail? Competing Visions Clash in St. Louis
Opinion
The horrible truth about shaken baby syndrome cases.
The End of ‘The Aftermath’
The DOJ IG Backlog on Bill Barr's Behavior
Disability Justice Demands Abolition
What if Jens Söring Actually Did It?
An AI tool used in thousands of criminal cases is facing legal challenges
Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas, wife indicted over ties to Azerbaijan
Peter Schey, relentless advocate for migrant rights, dies at 77
DACA recipients will be eligible for federal health care coverage under new Biden rule
Closing Argument
April 13
The Parents Paying for Their Children’s Crimes
Experts warn about a wave of legal consequences for parents like the Crumbleys, while some states consider prosecutions for kids as young as 10.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
April 12
I Had a Tough Job at My Brooklyn Jail: Keeping Men From Taking Their Own Lives
As a suicide prevention aide, I had to make sure my fellow detainees didn’t harm themselves. It was surprisingly easy to get such a complex job.
By
Rashon Venable
Analysis
April 10
This Supreme Court Case on Homelessness May Limit Prisoner Rights and Expand Executions
In Grants Pass v. Johnson, a town in Oregon asks the court to reconsider what constitutes “cruel and unusual punishments.”
By
Maurice Chammah
,
Shannon Heffernan
and
Beth Schwartzapfel
Closing Argument
April 6
What an Eclipse Lockdown Reveals about Dignity in Prisons and Jails
Recent lawsuits regarding the rights of incarcerated people and guards include gender, religious discrimination, and the right to watch the eclipse
By
Jamiles Lartey