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AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS &AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
POLICE MISCONDUCT COSTS CITIES MILLIONS EVERY YEAR. BUT I n the spring of 2016, the city of Cleveland agreed to pay $6 million to the family of Tamir Rice, the 12-year-old boy who was shot and killed by a city police officer in late 2014. It was one of the only forms of justice the grieving family was likely to receive. 1 A grand jury had already opted not to charge the officers involved, so the city’s decision to settle the family’s wrongful “HELL NO”: CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS ARE DECLINING THE “Hell No”: Correctional Officers Are Declining The Coronavirus Vaccine En Masse Public health experts worry that high refusal rates could undermine efforts to control the pandemic inside and outside ofprisons.
HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week. TRIBE’S SUPREME COURT WIN ROILS JUSTICE SYSTEM IN OKLAHOMA In 1881, in what is now South Dakota, a chief of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe was murdered by a tribal member named Crow Dog. The tribe’s leaders, who relied heavily on a system of restorative justice, decided that Crow Dog’s family would make restitution to the victim’s family. The Supreme Court affirmed the tribe’s power todo so in Ex
WHAT’S IN A PRISON MEAL? Inmates at Georgia’s Gordon County jail are fed twice a day, about 10 to 14 hours apart. And while the jail maintains they are providing sufficient calories (the recommended daily intake is 2,400-2,800 a day for men, and 1,800-2,000 for women), prisoners said they combated their hunger by licking syrup packets and drinking excessive amountsof water.
THE MARSHALL PROJECT WINS THE PULITZER PRIZE 1 day ago · The Marshall Project, AL.com, IndyStar and Invisible Institute have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for their year-long, far-reaching investigation into the life-altering injuries caused by police dog bites. “We are humbled by this honor, and excited to see nonprofit journalism COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECT The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus. FEDERAL PRISONS DENY COMPASSIONATE RELEASE DURING PANDEMIC 1 day ago · P eople in federal prisons seeking release during the pandemic have two main ways to get out early. One is home confinement, which allows low-risk prisoners to finish their sentences at home or in a halfway house. They’re still considered in custody, and the decision to let them out is entirely up to the Bureau of Prisons. A STATE-BY-STATE LOOK AT CORONAVIRUS IN PRISONS The first known COVID-19 death of a prisoner was in Georgia when Anthony Cheek died on March 26, 2020. Cheek, who was 49 years old, had been held in Lee State Prison near Albany, a hot spot for the disease. Since then, at least 2,679 other prisoners have died of coronavirus-related causes. JAIL POPULATIONS CREEP BACK UP AFTER COVID-19 N o sooner had social distancing become the new normal than it became clear that such a thing was impossible in jails. Overcrowding, poor sanitation and subpar medical care amplified the threat. And unlike in prison, where people serve sentences of one year or more, the jail population is in constant churn as people are arrested, released on bond or take plea deals and leave. THE SYSTEM: THE STATE OF BAIL REFORM The State of Bail Reform. Bail reform is state-by-state and full of fits and starts. Some activists are taking direct action, raising funds to bail out defendants too poor to pay. While racial justice and criminal justice reform activists have long argued that cash bail criminalizes poverty, mainstream awareness has increased in recentmonths.
SMALL TOWNS USED TO SEE PRISONS AS A BOON. NOW, MANY DON’T In 1998, hundreds of excited Nebraskans packed into the high school gymnasium in Tecumseh to voice their support for a new business in town: a state-of-the-art maximum-security prison. Officials eagerly anticipated hundreds of jobs, a boom in population and a surge in local business investment. One “PHILLY D.A.”: LARRY KRASNER’S FIRST TERM, UNDER A LENS “Philly D.A.”: Larry Krasner’s First Term, Under a Lens A documentary examines the Philadelphia prosecutor’s efforts to bring about criminal justice I HATE TO ADMIT IT, BUT PRISON IS A BLESSING IN DISGUISE 1 day ago · As much as I hate to admit it, prison has been a blessing in disguise for me. Before my incarceration, my life consisted of drug dealing, drug using, carrying a gun and running from the police. It was like I was dodging bullets while chasing death. When you come to prison, two things can transpireSUSAN HENNESSEY
What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events that are shaping the criminal justice conversation. THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS &AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.ST. FRANCOIS COUNTY
St. Francois County. Feature July 29, 2020. Your Local Jail May Be A House of Horrors. But you probably wouldn’t know it, because sheriffs rule them with little accountability. After one man's death in a notorious lockup, residents of a Missouri town fought back. ByMaurice Chammah.
JOSEPH NEFF
Joseph Neff is an investigative reporter who worked at The News & Observer of Raleigh, N.C., and The Associated Press. He was a Pulitzer finalist and has won awards including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the MOLLY National Journalism Prize, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi and others. RICHARD MIDKIFF LEFT PRISON A YEAR AGO. A COURT RULING MAY A Year After Prison, He Has a Job, a Fiancée—And a Week Left of Freedom. Richard Midkiff spent 23 years behind bars. A dispute over his decades-old plea deal could send him back for 15 more. Richard Midkiff has been free for a year after spending 23 years behind bars for second-degree murder. Now, he may have to return to prison. THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS &AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.ST. FRANCOIS COUNTY
St. Francois County. Feature July 29, 2020. Your Local Jail May Be A House of Horrors. But you probably wouldn’t know it, because sheriffs rule them with little accountability. After one man's death in a notorious lockup, residents of a Missouri town fought back. ByMaurice Chammah.
JOSEPH NEFF
Joseph Neff is an investigative reporter who worked at The News & Observer of Raleigh, N.C., and The Associated Press. He was a Pulitzer finalist and has won awards including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the MOLLY National Journalism Prize, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi and others. RICHARD MIDKIFF LEFT PRISON A YEAR AGO. A COURT RULING MAY A Year After Prison, He Has a Job, a Fiancée—And a Week Left of Freedom. Richard Midkiff spent 23 years behind bars. A dispute over his decades-old plea deal could send him back for 15 more. Richard Midkiff has been free for a year after spending 23 years behind bars for second-degree murder. Now, he may have to return to prison. THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE MARSHALL PROJECT WINS THE PULITZER PRIZE 22 hours ago · The Marshall Project, AL.com, IndyStar and Invisible Institute have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for their year-long, far-reaching investigation into the life-altering injuries caused by police dog bites. “We are humbled by this FEDERAL PRISONS DENY COMPASSIONATE RELEASE DURING PANDEMIC 1 day ago · P eople in federal prisons seeking release during the pandemic have two main ways to get out early. One is home confinement, which allows low-risk prisoners to finish their sentences at home or in a halfway house. They’re still considered in custody, and the decision to let them out is entirely up to the Bureau of Prisons. SMALL TOWNS USED TO SEE PRISONS AS A BOON. NOW, MANY DON’T In 1998, hundreds of excited Nebraskans packed into the high school gymnasium in Tecumseh to voice their support for a new business in town: a state-of-the-art maximum-security prison. Officials eagerly anticipated hundreds of jobs, a boom in population and a surge in local business investment. One CORONAVIRUS THROWS FOSTER CARE SYSTEM INTO CRISIS Coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic, criminal justice and immigration. The foster care system, built on frequent movements of children from one home to another and regular in-person supervision, has been especially wracked with confusion and dread by the coronavirus crisis. In some states, investigators of child abuse have told The Marshall “PHILLY D.A.”: LARRY KRASNER’S FIRST TERM, UNDER A LENS “Philly D.A.”: Larry Krasner’s First Term, Under a Lens A documentary examines the Philadelphia prosecutor’s efforts to bring about criminal justice TRIBE’S SUPREME COURT WIN ROILS JUSTICE SYSTEM IN OKLAHOMA In 1881, in what is now South Dakota, a chief of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe was murdered by a tribal member named Crow Dog. The tribe’s leaders, who relied heavily on a system of restorative justice, decided that Crow Dog’s family would make restitution to the victim’s family. The Supreme Court affirmed the tribe’s power todo so in Ex
I HATE TO ADMIT IT, BUT PRISON IS A BLESSING IN DISGUISE 1 day ago · As much as I hate to admit it, prison has been a blessing in disguise for me. Before my incarceration, my life consisted of drug dealing, drug using, carrying a gun and running from the police. It was like I was dodging bullets while chasing death. When you come to prison, two things can transpire WHICH STATES ARE TAKING ON POLICE REFORM AFTER GEORGE Lawmakers in 16 states have introduced bills to improve police oversight and accountability. Eighteen days after George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer, the Minnesota state Legislature introduced 48 bills in a special session on law enforcement. On the same day, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a new billrestricting police
THE SECRET HINTS FOR WINNING PAROLE The techniques include: “Grooming — hair combed, teeth brushed, etc.”. “Sit up straight, arms at sides” — note “what crossed arms say about attitude.”. Avoid “repeating phrases like ‘you know what I’m saying.’”. Inmates are advised to wear “clean clothes, appropriate to the temperature” and the group is directedto
ELIZA ORLINS
What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events that are shaping the criminal justice conversation. THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS &AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.ST. FRANCOIS COUNTY
St. Francois County. Feature July 29, 2020. Your Local Jail May Be A House of Horrors. But you probably wouldn’t know it, because sheriffs rule them with little accountability. After one man's death in a notorious lockup, residents of a Missouri town fought back. ByMaurice Chammah.
JOSEPH NEFF
Joseph Neff is an investigative reporter who worked at The News & Observer of Raleigh, N.C., and The Associated Press. He was a Pulitzer finalist and has won awards including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the MOLLY National Journalism Prize, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi and others. RICHARD MIDKIFF LEFT PRISON A YEAR AGO. A COURT RULING MAY A Year After Prison, He Has a Job, a Fiancée—And a Week Left of Freedom. Richard Midkiff spent 23 years behind bars. A dispute over his decades-old plea deal could send him back for 15 more. Richard Midkiff has been free for a year after spending 23 years behind bars for second-degree murder. Now, he may have to return to prison. THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS &AWARDSRACE
The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IS REPLACING THE DEATH PENALTY Life-without-parole sentences are steadily replacing the death penalty across the United States. Almost 56,000 people nationwide are now serving sentences that will keep them locked up until they die, an increase of 66% since 2003, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for shorter prison terms. By comparison, only 2,500 people nationally are on death row according to I WASN’T A SUPERPREDATOR. I WAS A KID WHO MADE A TERRIBLE I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying to shed. Filed 6:00 a.m. 11.20.2020. Derrick Hardaway in Chicago inOctober.
HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.ST. FRANCOIS COUNTY
St. Francois County. Feature July 29, 2020. Your Local Jail May Be A House of Horrors. But you probably wouldn’t know it, because sheriffs rule them with little accountability. After one man's death in a notorious lockup, residents of a Missouri town fought back. ByMaurice Chammah.
JOSEPH NEFF
Joseph Neff is an investigative reporter who worked at The News & Observer of Raleigh, N.C., and The Associated Press. He was a Pulitzer finalist and has won awards including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the MOLLY National Journalism Prize, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi and others. RICHARD MIDKIFF LEFT PRISON A YEAR AGO. A COURT RULING MAY A Year After Prison, He Has a Job, a Fiancée—And a Week Left of Freedom. Richard Midkiff spent 23 years behind bars. A dispute over his decades-old plea deal could send him back for 15 more. Richard Midkiff has been free for a year after spending 23 years behind bars for second-degree murder. Now, he may have to return to prison. THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE MARSHALL PROJECT WINS THE PULITZER PRIZE 15 hours ago · The Marshall Project, AL.com, IndyStar and Invisible Institute have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for their year-long, far-reaching investigation into the life-altering injuries caused by police dog bites. “We are humbled by this FEDERAL PRISONS DENY COMPASSIONATE RELEASE DURING PANDEMIC 22 hours ago · P eople in federal prisons seeking release during the pandemic have two main ways to get out early. One is home confinement, which allows low-risk prisoners to finish their sentences at home or in a halfway house. They’re still considered in custody, and the decision to let them out is entirely up to the Bureau of Prisons. SMALL TOWNS USED TO SEE PRISONS AS A BOON. NOW, MANY DON’T 1 day ago · In 1998, hundreds of excited Nebraskans packed into the high school gymnasium in Tecumseh to voice their support for a new business in town: a state-of-the-art maximum-security prison. Officials eagerly anticipated hundreds of jobs, a boom in population and a surge in local business investment. One CORONAVIRUS THROWS FOSTER CARE SYSTEM INTO CRISIS Coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic, criminal justice and immigration. The foster care system, built on frequent movements of children from one home to another and regular in-person supervision, has been especially wracked with confusion and dread by the coronavirus crisis. In some states, investigators of child abuse have told The Marshall “PHILLY D.A.”: LARRY KRASNER’S FIRST TERM, UNDER A LENS “Philly D.A.”: Larry Krasner’s First Term, Under a Lens A documentary examines the Philadelphia prosecutor’s efforts to bring about criminal justice TRIBE’S SUPREME COURT WIN ROILS JUSTICE SYSTEM IN OKLAHOMA In 1881, in what is now South Dakota, a chief of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe was murdered by a tribal member named Crow Dog. The tribe’s leaders, who relied heavily on a system of restorative justice, decided that Crow Dog’s family would make restitution to the victim’s family. The Supreme Court affirmed the tribe’s power todo so in Ex
I HATE TO ADMIT IT, BUT PRISON IS A BLESSING IN DISGUISE 1 day ago · As much as I hate to admit it, prison has been a blessing in disguise for me. Before my incarceration, my life consisted of drug dealing, drug using, carrying a gun and running from the police. It was like I was dodging bullets while chasing death. When you come to prison, two things can transpire WHICH STATES ARE TAKING ON POLICE REFORM AFTER GEORGE Lawmakers in 16 states have introduced bills to improve police oversight and accountability. Eighteen days after George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer, the Minnesota state Legislature introduced 48 bills in a special session on law enforcement. On the same day, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a new billrestricting police
THE SECRET HINTS FOR WINNING PAROLE The techniques include: “Grooming — hair combed, teeth brushed, etc.”. “Sit up straight, arms at sides” — note “what crossed arms say about attitude.”. Avoid “repeating phrases like ‘you know what I’m saying.’”. Inmates are advised to wear “clean clothes, appropriate to the temperature” and the group is directedto
ELIZA ORLINS
What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events that are shaping the criminal justice conversation. THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS & AWARDSRACECORRECTIONAL STAFF COVID 19 POSITIVE MARSHAL…IS THE MARSHALL PROJECT LIBERALTHE CRIMINAL JUSTICE MARSHALL PROJECT The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.MURDERER REGISTRY
Murderer Registry. What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE SECRET HINTS FOR WINNING PAROLE The techniques include: “Grooming — hair combed, teeth brushed, etc.”. “Sit up straight, arms at sides” — note “what crossed arms say about attitude.”. Avoid “repeating phrases like ‘you know what I’m saying.’”. Inmates are advised to wear “clean clothes, appropriate to the temperature” and the group is directedto
CARY ASPINWALL
Cary Aspinwall is a Dallas-based staff writer for The Marshall Project. Previously, she was an investigative reporter at The Dallas Morning News, where she reported on the impact of pre-trial incarceration and money bail on women and children in Texas and deaths in police custody involving excessive force and medical negligence. THE SEISMIC CHANGE IN POLICE INTERROGATIONS The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. Parole Is Better Than Prison. But That Doesn’t Mean I’m Free. At age 17, I was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. ALEX BERENSON BUILDS A CASE AGAINST MARIJUANA Alex Berenson is probably best known as the author of the John Wells espionage thrillers, 11 of them so far, but until 2010 he was a reporter, including for 11 years at The New York Times, where his assignments ranged from the pharmaceutical industry to HurricaneKatrina.
THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDENEWS INSIDETHE NEXT TO DIETHE RECORDELECTION 2020WE ARE WITNESSES The majority of states obtain money intended for foster children with disabilities or a deceased parent without telling them, The Marshall Project and NPR found. “There is a whole wave of attacking elderly people in different ways," one New York legislator says. COVID-19 | THE MARSHALL PROJECTLIFE INSIDEDEATH PENALTYABOUTJOBSNEWS & AWARDSRACECORRECTIONAL STAFF COVID 19 POSITIVE MARSHAL…IS THE MARSHALL PROJECT LIBERALTHE CRIMINAL JUSTICE MARSHALL PROJECT The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. At the start of the pandemic, we asked four incarcerated people to chronicle daily life with the coronavirus.THE NEXT TO DIE
With the Next to Die, The Marshall Project and our reporting partners tracked every execution in the United States from August 2015 to February 2021. By recording each story and noting every death, we wanted to show how the machinery of capital punishment quietly grinds forward while few are watching. HOW PRISON TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A NEO-NAZI How Prison Turned My Childhood Friend Into a Neo-Nazi. We grew up listening to Tupac, smoking blunts and emulating Black people. Behind bars, our past was a dangerous secret. By Christopher Blackwell. Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week.MURDERER REGISTRY
Murderer Registry. What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events THE SINGULAR SORROW OF GRIEVING BEHIND BARS Inside Story May 14. COVID-19 and Vaccine Mistrust Behind Bars. The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. By Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington, Jr. THE SECRET HINTS FOR WINNING PAROLE The techniques include: “Grooming — hair combed, teeth brushed, etc.”. “Sit up straight, arms at sides” — note “what crossed arms say about attitude.”. Avoid “repeating phrases like ‘you know what I’m saying.’”. Inmates are advised to wear “clean clothes, appropriate to the temperature” and the group is directedto
CARY ASPINWALL
Cary Aspinwall is a Dallas-based staff writer for The Marshall Project. Previously, she was an investigative reporter at The Dallas Morning News, where she reported on the impact of pre-trial incarceration and money bail on women and children in Texas and deaths in police custody involving excessive force and medical negligence. THE SEISMIC CHANGE IN POLICE INTERROGATIONS The second episode of The Marshall Project’s new video series, designed for audiences inside and outside of prison, reflects on how the COVID-19 vaccine has been received in lockups. Parole Is Better Than Prison. But That Doesn’t Mean I’m Free. At age 17, I was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. ALEX BERENSON BUILDS A CASE AGAINST MARIJUANA Alex Berenson is probably best known as the author of the John Wells espionage thrillers, 11 of them so far, but until 2010 he was a reporter, including for 11 years at The New York Times, where his assignments ranged from the pharmaceutical industry to HurricaneKatrina.
COPS PLANTING EVIDENCE cops planting evidence. What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and eventsthat are
THE NEXT TO DIE
people were executed in from 1976 through 2020. For five and a half years years, The Next to Die tracked every execution scheduled in the country, starting in 2015. This is what we learned. Although we are no longer updating these pages, you can read our continuing coverage of capital punishment in our new series Death Sentences. Of theJAIL POPULATION
Judges, prosecutors and sheriffs in many states sent people home instead of to jail last year, but new data suggests the change is notlasting.
THE SECRET HINTS FOR WINNING PAROLE The techniques include: “Grooming — hair combed, teeth brushed, etc.”. “Sit up straight, arms at sides” — note “what crossed arms say about attitude.”. Avoid “repeating phrases like ‘you know what I’m saying.’”. Inmates are advised to wear “clean clothes, appropriate to the temperature” and the group is directedto
PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events that are shaping the criminal justice conversation. The Marshall Project does not endorse the viewpoints orvouch
LIFE INSIDE
“Life Inside” is a weekly series of first-person essays from people who live or work in the criminal justice system. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get it in your inbox.. We're looking for 1,000 to 1,400-word nonfiction stories about a vivid, surprising, personal experience you had with the system—whether you are currently or formerly incarcerated, on probation or parole, a family TRIBE’S SUPREME COURT WIN ROILS JUSTICE SYSTEM IN OKLAHOMA In 1881, in what is now South Dakota, a chief of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe was murdered by a tribal member named Crow Dog. The tribe’s leaders, who relied heavily on a system of restorative justice, decided that Crow Dog’s family would make restitution to the victim’s family. The Supreme Court affirmed the tribe’s power todo so in Ex
WE ARE WITNESSES: CHICAGO We Are Witnesses: Chicago is an immersive short-video series presenting intimate portraits of Chicagoans who have been touched by the criminal justice system. Produced by The Marshall Project in partnership with Kartemquin Films and Illinois Humanities, these films explore the nature of crime, punishment and forgiveness.KIM KARDASHIAN
Kim Kardashian. What are records? Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events THE UNFOLDING CAMPAIGN TO SAVE THE DEATH PENALTY Supporters rally around a more efficient system of execution. By Maurice Chammah. Late last month, a group of California district attorneys and family members of murder victims launched a campaign to save the death penalty in their state. “This is not pro-death penalty,” announced Anne Marie Schubert, the district attorney ofSacramento County.
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THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING. PLEASE CONSIDER BECOMING A MEMBER TODAY. Life Inside November 25 Why My First Thanksgiving in Prison Was The Best One I’d Had InForever
Between being sober, getting a visit and having a surprise feast with the mean girls in my unit, I still cherish that day.By Keri Blakinger
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Biden Will Try to Unmake Trump's Immigration Agenda. It Won't Be Easy Restoring Asylum Claims and Judges’ Independence Will Be UphillWork.
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Coronavirus November 22 Where Coronavirus Is Surging—And Electronic Surveillance, Too In Chicago and elsewhere, the number of people wearing an ankle monitor has jumped in recent months due to the pandemic.By Eli Hager
Life Inside November 20 I Wasn’t a Superpredator. I Was a Kid Who Made a Terrible Decision. In 1994, at age 14, Derrick Hardaway took part in the murder of an 11-year-old. The media used the crime to build the myth of the superpredator—and stuck him with a label he’s still trying toshed.
By Derrick Hardaway as told to Carroll Bogert Feature November 17 We’re Tracking Police Dog Bites Across the Country Police dogs bite thousands of Americans each year, including innocent bystanders, children, police officers, even their own handlers. The Marshall Project—in collaboration with AL.com, IndyStar and the Invisible Institute—examined more than 150 serious cases nationwide. By The Marshall Project News Inside November 17Subjects To Debate
News Inside knows that political debates are always taking place behind the wall, even after the presidential election. That’s why Issue 6 is full of information that will help folks inside strengthentheir arguments.
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A Maine sheriff resigned after sexting his officers. The full storyis even darker.
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How the Justice System Fails People With Mental Illness*
Computer Crime Law Scrutinized at Supreme Court*
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Kenneth Gilbert: Maturity isn't automatic at 18. But life withoutparole sure is.
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CoreCivic and GEO Group have been shifting away from prisons toward other government contracts, like office space and immigrationdetention.
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Analysis November 11 Will Drug Legalization Leave Black People Behind? Even in states that have legalized or decriminalized marijuana possession, Black people are still more likely to be arrested for it than White people. These organizers are working to change that. By Wilbert L. Cooperand Christie
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What Biden’s Win Means for the Future of Criminal Justice Joe Biden ran on the most progressive criminal justice platform of any major party candidate in generations. So what can he actually do? By The Marshall Project StaffFeature November 8
When Going to the Hospital Is Just as Bad as Jail A new lawsuit claims Black Americans with mental illness are being forced into traumatic emergency room stays. By Christie Thompson*
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