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Closing Argument
For Many, a Lawyer Is a Luxury Out of Reach
Life Inside
While Doing Time in a California Prison, I Was Given a Hysterectomy Without My Consent
Analysis
4 Reasons We Should Worry About Missing Crime Data
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Closing Argument
July 8
Students Behind Bars Regain Access to College Financial Aid
Restored Pell Grant eligibility means about 760,000 people in prisons could eventually afford higher education.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
July 7
A Texas Jail Delayed My Prenatal Care to Keep Costs Down. Then I Had a Miscarriage.
Collin County Jail failed to send a bleeding, cramping Lauren Kent to an outside OB-GYN. In a lawsuit, she blames their “cost-containment” strategy.
By
Lauren Kent
as told to
Nicole Lewis
The Record
The
most popular topics
in criminal justice today
Department of Justice
Donald Trump
January 2021 Insurrection
Washington, D.C.
New York
Texas
California
Dangerous Conditions in Prisons/Jails
News
July 6
‘This is Major Trauma’: New Accounts of Abuse at Federal Prison Prompt Calls for Investigations
More than 120 prisoners held at a special unit in Thomson Penitentiary reported mistreatment, lawyers’ committee report says.
By
Christie Thompson
, The Marshall Project and
Joseph Shapiro
, NPR
News
July 5
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
Closing Argument
July 1
Why DeSantis Wants to Kill Trump’s Prison Reform Law
The Florida governor aims to be tougher on crime than any other presidential hopeful.
By
Jamiles Lartey
Life Inside
June 30
I Survived Pregnancy and Postpartum Depression in Jail. Now I Guide Others Like Me.
As a doula in Georgia prisons and jails, Tabatha Trammell supports incarcerated clients through pregnancy, childbirth — and giving up their newborns.
By
Tabatha Trammell
, as told to
Nicole Lewis
Opening Statement
Links from
this mornings’s email
16 false Trump electors face felony charges in Michigan
Texas troopers told to push back migrants into Rio Grande River and ordered not to give water amid soaring temperatures, report says
FBI charges now-husband of 'Pink Beret' Jan. 6 rioter who was turned in by her ex
Children at Angola Prison Trapped in Extreme Heat in Louisiana
Judge mulls timing of Trump classified documents trial
Illinois Supreme Court Upholds Measure Designed to End Cash Bail
Pain, death and secrets in Monterey County Jail – Voices of Monterey Bay
Homeless Veteran Sues Police After Service Dog Tased During Panhandling Arrest
In New Orleans, Black mothers are increasingly the victims of gun violence
Unhoused Coloradans turn to methamphetamine as a form of protection
When the Crime Wave Recedes
Biden Must Act on Landmark UN Special Rapporteur Guantanamo Report
Opinion
Bill Bratton talks Edward Caban being new NYPD commissioner
Never eat the candy on your pillow: Of acorns and oaks
Assistant Attorney General, on Eve of Exit, Touts Data’s Growing Role in Crime Fighting
The Death Penalty on Trial in Louisiana
Menendez brothers want court to vacate convictions amid new evidence
Does The Kentucky Attorney General Go To Work? An Investigation.
Three finalists picked for job of Chicago police superintendent
Life Inside
June 30
Reproductive Healthcare Behind Bars Was Dismal Even Before Roe Ended
Abortion is just one part of a greater story about how indifferent — and even cruel — reproductive healthcare can be in prisons and jails.
By
Nicole Lewis
and
Carla Canning
News
June 29
A Dozen Cities Set Youth Curfews This Year, Even Though They Don’t Reduce Crime
Texas recently banned juvenile curfews, while cities like Baltimore and Memphis have doubled-down on them.
By
Lakeidra Chavis
Testify
June 28
The Basics of Bail in Ohio
How do people get out of jail while they’re accused of a crime?
By
Rachel Dissell
,
Ilica Mahajan
and
David Eads
Feature
June 28
The Never-Ending Murder Case: How Mental Competency Laws Can Trap People With Dementia
As more Americans are diagnosed with the chronic disease, some find themselves in legal limbo.
By
Christie Thompson