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News
New Jersey Adopts Major Reforms Around Hospital Drug Testing of Pregnant Patients
Feature
Moms of Black Babies More Likely to Be Flagged to Police Over Alleged Pregnancy Drug Use
News
Amid Increased Scrutiny, ICE Detention and Deportation Data Goes Dark
The Marshall Project
Cleveland
July 14
State Reverses Course, Finds Cuyahoga Jail Staff Failed to Start CPR in Wade’s Death
State inspectors said jail staff failed to provide CPR to Jennifer Wade after finding her unresponsive in her cell in February 2025.
By
Doug Livingston
,
Brittany Hailer
and
Mark Puente
Feature
July 14
Grievances in Federal Prison Rarely Succeed. Here’s How Prisoners Would Change That.
The Marshall Project surveyed people in federal facilities for advice about the complaint process — and how to fix it.
By
Aala Abdullahi
and
Christie Thompson
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
ICE
Department of Justice
Deadly Force
ICE shooting of Lorenzo Salgado Arajuo
ICE shooting in Houston (July 2026)
Immigration Detention
Sending Kites
July 14
The Prison Rules You Won’t Find in Any Handbook
There are unofficial rules in every prison and jail. Here’s what you need to know before you go in.
By
Aala Abdullahi
and
Tammy Galarza
Feature
July 13
In Federal Prisons, Some Guards Use Fear and Violence to Stifle Complaints
Prisoners in federal facilities must file most grievances with the guards — a system they say exposes them to retaliation, including physical abuse.
By
Christie Thompson
and
Joseph Shapiro
Redemption Songs
July 12
An Opera Explores the Strain of Prison on a Marriage
In “9131,” incarcerated composer Joseph Wilson depicts a wife’s infidelity while her husband is up for parole.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
July 11
How Helping Detectives Led a Florida Woman to ICE Detention
Non-traditional state agencies, from college police to wildlife protection, have been pulled into immigration enforcement.
By
Shoshana Walter
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
Todd Blanche, Trump’s Attorney General Pick, Faces Crucial Hurdle After Rocky Hearing
Man fleeing immigration officers in Florida is struck and killed by tractor trailer, police say
DOJ Sets Case Quotas for Line Prosecutors in Push to Boost Stats
Colombian Immigrant Killed by ICE in Maine Had Legal Status, Father Says
Trump’s pick for spy chief: ‘I’m not an election denier’
Houston prosecutor "more than prepared" to bring charges against ICE agents if wrongdoing is found in fatal shooting
Family of woman shot by police suing Fort Lee, police over 2024 killing • New Jersey Monitor
Elon Musk's promise of $1 million voter payouts likely illegal, panel says
The fields confessed
The See-No-Evil Supreme Court
A Vermont school superintendent is challenging CBP's warrantless phone searches
With New York Times subpoenas, Trump is brazenly escalating his attacks on the press
Lindsey Graham’s Defense of Brett Kavanaugh Told Us Everything
In Texas Schools, a Crisis of Arrests of Kids as Young as 10
Judges grow skeptical about DOJ’s use of grand juries
States split on whether juvenile justice should prioritize punishment or rehabilitation • Stateline
Fat Leonard reveals how he escaped house arrest and fled the U.S.
Book Review: ‘Catch the Devil,’ by Pamela Colloff
Cleveland
July 9
We Asked Ohio’s Death Row What They Think of Governor’s Death Penalty Reversal
Like Gov. Mike DeWine, most agreed the death penalty is broken and does not deter crime, but not always with the same reasoning.
By
Doug Livingston
,
Brittany Hailer
and
Beth Schwartzapfel
The Frame
July 9
Made in America: The Products of U.S. Prison Labor Are All Around Us
A project by photographer Daniella Zalcman shows the casual prevalence of goods made by prison labor in public and private spaces.
Photographs and text by
Daniella Zalcman
Redemption Songs
July 5
A Timely Remix of ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ Out of a New York Prison
The Capitol riots angered Sing Sing’s Alfred Roberts. He responded with his version of what is widely known as the Black national anthem.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
July 4
From Public Flogging to Flock Cameras: How the U.S. Justice System Evolved Over 250 Years
As the nation celebrates two and a half centuries of independence, we put together a syllabus of some essential criminal justice reading.
By
Jamiles Lartey