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Jackson
They Spent Years in Solitary Confinement in Mississippi Despite Suicide Risk
Jackson
They Asked for Help. Instead, They Died in Solitary.
Redemption Songs
The San Quentin Prison Album That Should Have Been a Classic
The Marshall Project
Closing Argument
June 6
How The Supreme Court Is Tightening Early Prison Release
In recent decisions, the justices restricted the bipartisan First Step Act that President Donald Trump signed in his first term.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
June 5
I Have No Way to Pay My Six-Figure Restitution
A criminal court sentenced Harold Doby III to a $155,000 restitution. Falling behind could send him back to prison.
By
Harold Doby III
with
Wilbert L. Cooper
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Second Trump administration
Department of Justice
ICE
Immigration Detention
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Delaney Hall
Louisiana
Department of Homeland Security
The Frame
June 3
108 Days Apart: A Wife’s Fight to Free Her Husband From Delaney Hall
Sandra Hafraoui spent months trying to bring her husband home after ICE detained him on a 16-year-old deportation order he didn’t know existed.
By
Corrie Aune
and
Lauren Villagran
Cleveland
June 3
Cuyahoga County Jail Leaders Knew Their Cameras Were Broken and Took 4 Years to Fix Them
A glitch in the surveillance system discovered in 2022 has finally been fixed. Families and inspectors could have used that evidence.
By
Doug Livingston
Jackson
June 2
How the U.S. Supreme Court’s Callais Ruling Erased a Key Mississippi Voting Rights Victory
A major legal win for Black Mississippians that was supposed to lead to new elections for the state Supreme Court was wiped away.
By
Caleb Bedillion
Cleveland
June 1
Former Cuyahoga County Judge Leslie Ann Celebrezze Sentenced to 60 days in Jail and $10,000 Fine
Reporting by The Marshall Project - Cleveland leads to sentencing of former longtime Judge Leslie Ann Celebrezze for steering work to a friend.
By
Mark Puente
Opening Statement
Links from
this morning’s email
How a Gun-Rights Extremist Could Soon Represent Uvalde in Congress
One judge, 143 cases: A day inside new high-stakes mass immigration hearings
How the Drive to Find a Conspiracy Against Trump Rocked the Justice Dept.
Prosecutors Won’t Seek Death Penalty in Killing of Melissa Hortman and Husband
Lafayette sheriff’s ICE partnership has grown to include detention, active enforcement • Louisiana Illuminator
The spectacular collapse of a case against ICE protesters: ‘It’s not justice, but it is a win’
Arkansas GOP sheriff nominee's murder charge dismissed
‘The whole of New York is stressed right now’: how Knicks finals fever reached Rikers Island
The Trump Administration’s Savage Ignorance on Homelessness
Is Trump’s ‘Anti-Weaponization’ Slush Fund Dead? Or Is It Undead?
Bang, Bang, Bang: Callais Kills Off the Voting Rights Act
How Bari Weiss's Free Press laundered MAGA talking points about refugees
Michael Jackson: The Verdict: Netflix’s documentary is essential viewing.
Three fathers killed their families this week as domestic violence deaths remain high
Andrew Tate’s Empire of Abuse
Army lays groundwork for death row executions if Trump gives approval
Trump’s Justice Department Is Suing Cities and States to Dismantle Gun Laws – Mother Jones
Bob Packwood, senator forced to resign in sexual misconduct scandal, dies at 93
Feature
June 1
ICE Detained Them, and Then They Vanished
Under Trump, the U.S. increasingly sends immigrants all over the nation with little warning, leaving families and attorneys unsure where they are.
By
Aala Abdullahi
and
Geoff Hing
Redemption Songs
May 31
How Rapper G. Dep Went From Incarcerated to ‘Influential’
The Harlem MC explains how prison gave him the freedom to rap about more than material things.
By
Maurice Chammah
Closing Argument
May 30
Bad Food. Poor Care. No Toilets. ICE Detention Misery Pushes Immigrants to ‘Voluntarily’ Depart.
As evidence of poor detention conditions grows, voluntary departures have skyrocketed since President Donald Trump returned to office.
By
Jamiles Lartey
News
May 29
The U.S. Deported Them to Iran Just Before American Bombs Started Falling
Trump’s State Department told Americans to avoid Iran, Venezuela, Ukraine, South Sudan and other nations where the U.S. simultaneously deported people.
By
Beth Schwartzapfel