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Cleveland
All Stick, No Carrot: Ohio’s Reagan Tokes Law Acts as a ‘One-Way Ratchet’ for Prison Time
Closing Argument
The Bipartisan Push to Rethink Long Sentences for Abuse Survivors
News
Who Is Billy Marshall? What to Know About Trump’s New Bureau of Prisons Director
St. Louis
April 21
St. Louis Jail Is a ‘Potential Powder Keg’
A facility built for progress reflects ‘decades of neglect’ and the city’s deepest struggles, from mental illness to systemic dysfunction.
By
Jesse Bogan
Life Inside
April 18
How I Became an Opera Composer in a Maximum Security Prison
I learned music theory through workshops at New York’s Sing Sing prison. I earned my stripes by singing for boisterous crowds of incarcerated critics.
By
Joseph Wilson
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Immigration
Deportation
Immigration Detention
ICE
El Salvador
Kilmar Abrego Garcia
Get Involved
April 10
Did Your Family Member Die in Prison or Jail? What Happened Next?
Your insights help inform The Marshall Project’s reporting on what families go through when someone dies in custody.
By
The Marshall Project
Cleveland
April 10
How Ohio’s Reagan Tokes Law Keeps People in Prison Longer
It came as a response by lawmakers to a horrific crime. Now, thousands of people imprisoned since 2019 risk more time behind bars for breaking rules.
By
Doug Livingston
Jackson
April 8
Search Mississippi Criminal Justice Bills as They Move Through the Legislature
Use our interactive bill tracker to stay informed on changes to courts, policing, prisons and more.
By
Caleb Bedillion
Closing Argument
April 5
Trump Is Targeting International Students Over Pro-Palestinian Protests. But Is It Legal?
After the administration revoked 300 students’ visas, the courts will have to decide if the Constitution protects the free speech of noncitizens.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
Adams Is Letting ICE Into Rikers. The City Council Is Suing to Stop Him.
In North Carolina, Juvenile Lifers See a Pathway to Freedom
Virginia Prisoners Sue After Self-Immolations at Red Onion Prison
As Fentanyl Deaths Slow, Meth Comes for Maine
Some NC crime victims say their rights are not respected
Rockford to borrow $13.7M from bond sale to pay off 2 wrongful conviction settlements
The firing squad’s return is a defeat for death penalty supporters
How Criminal Convictions Can Affect Your Family
Child detention is cruel and inflicts lasting harm. End it
Donald Trump immigration: Why the Trump admin is fighting to keep detained international students in Louisiana.
A Call for Comfort Brought the Police Instead. Now the Solution Is in Danger.
Life Inside
April 4
I Changed My Violent Prison Life in the Most Random Way: I Quit Drinking Soda
This simple act of self-denial forced me to admit that a major source of my life’s problems was my lack of self-discipline.
By
Eric Williams
St. Louis
April 3
Sandra Hemme’s 43-Year Fight for Innocence Reflects Pitfalls in Missouri’s Justice System
Even after a judge declared her innocent and ordered her freed, the Missouri attorney general tried to send her back.
By
Katie Moore
News
April 2
These States Have Investigated Miscarriages and Stillbirths as Crimes
A recent arrest in Georgia highlights the criminal suspicion that surrounds pregnancy loss in several states, experts say.
By
Cary Aspinwall
Feature
April 2
Why Some Doctors Are Pushing to End Routine Drug Testing During Childbirth
Hospitals routinely report parents to child welfare authorities based on error-prone drug tests. Some hospitals are changing policy as a result.
By
Shoshana Walter