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St. Louis

The Marshall Project Announces St. Louis Local News Team

This will be our third local news team; this one will produce investigative, data and engagement journalism to serve audiences across Missouri.

A composite photo of, from left: Jesse Bogan, a White man with glasses; Ivy Scott, a Black woman; Katie Moore, a Korean American woman; and Will Lager, a White man with glasses.
From left: Jesse Bogan, Ivy Scott, Katie Moore, and Will Lager.

The Marshall Project is delighted to announce the launch of its third local newsroom — this time in St. Louis, which will include two investigative reporters, an engagement reporter, and a partnerships coordinator.

The reporting team will all be based in the St. Louis area. The Marshall Project - St. Louis will combine journalistic horsepower from The Marshall Project’s national newsroom with a local team to deepen local criminal justice coverage in Missouri. The issues include the death penalty, the school-to-prison pipeline, re-entry, and healthcare in prisons.

“Our assembled team of reporters will bring fresh eyes and decades of experience to cover the criminal justice system. I’m extremely excited for the work we will do in St. Louis and around Missouri,” said Marlon A. Walker, managing editor of local, who has deep ties in St. Louis, where he previously worked at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

The Marshall Project’s national newsroom has already established a presence reporting in St. Louis. In 2024, we reported a story about a death penalty case in Missouri that highlighted the harm caused by paying death penalty lawyers a flat rate no matter how long they work on a case.

We also partnered with St. Louis Public Radio and APM Reports to report a five-part series on how St. Louis police struggled to solve over a thousand murders in the past decade. By combining public records that our partners had already fought to secure with the skills of our reporting and visuals team, we worked together to produce an immersive, multimedia story that provided a deeper understanding of the reporting. The investigation was recently honored with an EPPY award, which celebrates excellence in digital journalism.

The Marshall Project has hired an impressive team of journalists with a long track record covering criminal justice issues. They include:

The Marshall Project - St. Louis will co-publish many of its stories with local publications to support the way other local newsrooms cover criminal justice themselves. This follows a similar model to newsrooms in Cleveland and Jackson, Mississippi.

The Missouri Foundation for Health’s three-year grant will enable The Marshall Project to hire staff and build capacity in Missouri. The Joan & John Vatterott Family Foundation is also supporting this initiative.

“We remain committed to strengthening the journalistic infrastructure in Missouri and building a pipeline of reporters who will remain in the state to tell our stories,” said Missouri Foundation for Health Vice President of Strategic Communications Courtney Z. McCall. “We see partnerships like this one as a step toward achieving health equity and playing a role in changing systems that serve as a barrier in solving the complex health issues of our communities.”