Menu icon
The Marshall Project
Nonprofit journalism about criminal justice
Search
About
Newsletters
Donate
A nonprofit news organization covering the U.S. criminal justice system
Search
Magnifying glass
Local Network
Cleveland
Jackson
St. Louis
Projects
Inside Story
News Inside
Life Inside
Mauled
The Language Project
The Record
The System
Topics
Death Penalty
Immigration
Juvenile Justice
Mental Health
Policing
Politics
Prison and Jail Conditions
Prosecuting Pregnancy
About
About Us
Local Network
The Marshall Project Inside
News & Awards
Impact
People
Supporters
Jobs
Investigate This!
Newsletters
Events
Donate
Feedback?
Arrow
support@themarshallproject.org
Analysis
Remembering Tom Robbins
Analysis
George Floyd, 5 Years Later
Closing Argument
As Trump Abandons Police Reforms, These Local Officials Vow to Press On
Life Inside
May 23
Love Beyond Bars: Larry and Gloria
Larry Moses and Gloria Armour first dated in their 20s. The New Orleans duo reunited in their 60s, after Moses was wrongfully imprisoned for 29 years.
Photographs and Interview by
Camille Farrah Lenain
Written by
Carla Canning
News
May 22
Is Trump’s Ban on Gender-Affirming Care for Trans Prisoners Unconstitutional?
A federal judge considers if the president’s executive order barring hormone treatment in the Bureau of Prisons is cruel and unusual punishment.
By
Beth Schwartzapfel
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Pardons
Department of Justice
Deportation
Immigration Detention
Clemency
Immigration
Analysis
May 21
The Unbearable Darkness of Jail
Jails in St. Louis, Cleveland and Jackson, Mississippi, don’t provide direct access to sunlight and fresh air – even when their own policies require it.
By
Ivy Scott
,
Brittany Hailer
and
Daja E. Henry
St. Louis
May 19
Rural Missouri Jails See Windfall in Trump’s Mass Deportation Effort
As cash-strapped jails rush in for ICE contracts, one man’s death shows the complexity and risk of detaining immigrants.
By
Jesse Bogan
News
May 19
They’re Facing Deportation with Severe Mental Illness — And Now Without a Lawyer
The Trump administration recently ended a legal aid program, leaving immigrants who have mental health disorders on their own.
By
Christie Thompson
Closing Argument
May 17
Five Years After George Floyd’s Murder, Police Reforms Are Being Rolled Back
As reforms stall in some states, the U.S. Supreme Court just made it easier for police to be sued — and perhaps easier for police to defend themselves.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
Trump pardons Michael Grimm, former NY congressman who pleaded guilty to tax evasion
The Criminalization of Venezuelan Street Culture
Louisiana town in ‘detention alley’ backs ICE center in its midst
Federal judge denies attempt to block commuted death row inmates' transfer to 'Supermax' prison
Bernard Kerik, who led NYPD on 9/11 before prison and pardon, has died at 69
South Carolina Supreme Court rejects inmate's request for more firing squad details
A Missouri Town Was Solidly Behind Trump. Then Carol Was Detained.
‘Egregious Delays’ and No Attorney Assistance: How Those Incarcerated Fight Their Convictions
Head of human smuggling plot gets 10 years after migrant family froze to death on US-Canada border
Why Did Americans Elect a Felon Instead of a Prosecutor?
Crime is Now Legal (At Least for Trump’s Friends)
Opinion
The first rule of ICE Club? Don't talk about ICE Club. And treat all migrants as criminals. • Kansas Reflector
Why Has New York City Defied the Great American Crime Decline?
Federal Bureau Of Prisons To Expand Home Confinement
The US Is Storing Migrant Children’s DNA in a Criminal Database
Trump to Nominate Emil Bove to Appeals Court
Alabama’s oldest prison inmate dies at age 106 at Birmingham hospital
News and Awards
May 16
The Marshall Project Honored in 10 Categories by the Society for News Design
The competition honors the best in visual journalism and design in the world.
By
The Marshall Project
Cleveland
May 16
Ohio Lawmaker Wants to Require Jails to Report Pregnancy Outcomes
The Cleveland Democrat says “all babies should count,” — regardless of whether their mother is behind bars — to ensure access to healthcare for pregnant women.
By
Mark Puente
, The Marshall Project, and
Scott Noll
, News 5 Cleveland
Cleveland
May 15
Uncounted: Ohio’s Failure to Track Lost Pregnancies in Jails Spurs Questions Over Care
One woman’s pregnancy ended in the Cuyahoga County Jail amid ignored cries for help and an “egregious performance failure” by medical staff.
By
Mark Puente
, The Marshall Project, and
Scott Noll
, News 5 Cleveland
Jackson
May 14
DOJ Shakeup May Put Civil Rights Probe of 1970 Jackson State, Mississippi, Killings At Risk
The Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Act made way for investigations of racially motivated killings. The federal agency enforcing it is in disarray.
By
Daja E. Henry