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Analysis
How a Centuries-Old Legal Tool Helped Immigrants Leave ICE Detention
Analysis
Are Firing Squads the Future of Executions?
Redemption Songs
The Incredible Story Behind The Escorts, a 1970s Soul Band Formed in Prison
The Marshall Project
Closing Argument
May 16
Rats, Insects and Mold: How Bad Food Leaves Prisoners Hungry and Sick
Georgia spends about 60 cents per meal for prisoners. One man described it as ‘Being hungry all the time, and being fed slop.’
By
Beth Schwartzapfel
Cleveland
May 14
‘We Need to Hammer Them’: How One City Took Parking Enforcement to the Extreme
A Marshall Project - Cleveland investigation found two Lorain judges improperly suspended licenses for single parking tickets.
By
Mark Puente
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Immigration
ICE
Department of Justice
Second Trump administration
Immigration Detention
Trump Administration
Department of Homeland Security
Feature
May 11
They Called 911 for Help. Police Sent Them to ICE Detention Instead.
As more local police collaborate with ICE, even some crime victims and people who call 911 are facing arrest.
By
Shoshana Walter
Redemption Songs
May 10
A Prison Lullaby for Mother’s Day
Krystal Lowe wrote and recorded this song for her 2-year-old in a Kansas prison. Instead of baby talk, she urges her daughter to know her worth.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
May 9
Did the California Supreme Court Just Remake the State’s Bail System?
A new ruling affirms the right to pretrial release, and says prosecutors must show specific cause to keep someone in jail.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
May 8
For This Mom in Prison, Mother’s Day Is a Blessing and a Curse
Kwaneta Harris has missed every single Mother’s Day with her 19-year-old. That means walking on eggshells, icy politeness and the occasional mom joke.
By
Kwaneta Harris
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
Shooting at San Diego mosque kills 3 and both shooters are dead
ICE officer charged with four counts of assault in Minnesota shooting of Venezuelan immigrant
Over 100,000 American Kids Had Parents Detained in Immigration Sweeps, Report Estimates — ProPublica
Woman dies at Rikers Island jail, the third death in custody this year
Official Demands Probe Into Turner’s Outdoorsman Gun Sales
Louisiana payout cannot erase pain of Ronald Greene death by police – lawyer
“No-Merit” Practice Lets Philadelphia Lawyers Reject Conviction Challenges — ProPublica
Force Multipliers
First Draft: Islamophobes Can't Shut Up Even as Muslims Are Murdered at a California Mosque
Opinion
The theory behind the Southern Poverty Law Center prosecution is flawed
The FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers
Woman Gives Birth in Brooklyn Courtroom
Supreme Court sends voting rights case back to lower court
Luigi Mangione prosecutors can use gun and notebook as evidence, judge rules
The Frame
May 8
Raising Innocence
An Indiana Women’s Prison unit gives incarcerated people a place to raise their newborns on the inside, rather than forcing them to give their babies up after birth.
By
Maddie Mcgarvey
News and Awards
May 6
Lauren Villagran joins The Marshall Project to Cover Immigration
She has reported on this critical issue for nearly two decades along the southern United States and in Mexico.
By
The Marshall Project
Analysis
May 4
When Do ‘Detention Centers’ Become ‘Concentration Camps’? Experts Look to History
Concentration camps, often associated with Nazi killing centers, existed before WWII in several countries.
By
Katie Moore
Redemption Songs
May 3
This Is the Sound of 1,300 People in Prison Singing Gospel Together
Kirk Franklin, Maverick City Music and a choir of 30 incarcerated men recorded one of the biggest prison concerts in Florida history.
By
Maurice Chammah