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Indictment
Jackson
May 2
Mississippi Lawmakers Considered Modest Public Defense Reforms. They Rejected All of Them.
With its refusal to impose oversight or consistent standards in local defense, Mississippi risks falling further behind the rest of the U.S., critics say.
By
Caleb Bedillion
Jackson
July 5, 2023
Mississippi Says Poor Defendants Must Always Have a Lawyer. Few Courts Are Ready to Deliver
A rule requiring poor criminal defendants to have a lawyer throughout the criminal process took effect Saturday.
By
Caleb Bedillion
, Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
News
April 14
Some Are Jailed in Mississippi for Months Without a Lawyer. A Court Just Barred That.
The Mississippi Supreme Court moved to end the “dead zone” before indictment in a notoriously dysfunctional public defender system.
By
Caleb Bedillion
and
Taylor Vance
Analysis
April 4, 2023
Most New Yorkers Don’t Get the Trump Treatment at Arraignment
The 31,000 people arraigned for felonies in New York each year have very different experiences in court than the former president.
By
The Marshall Project
Life Inside
October 27, 2015
Confessions of a Grand Juror
Ten days in a room with 22 other jurors. What could possibly go wrong?
By
Caroline Grueskin