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Artificial intelligence is changing how police investigate crimes — and monitor citizens — as regulators struggle to keep pace.
A violence prevention program is pairing cognitive behavioral therapy with other support to keep high-risk teens out of jail.
Gibbs and Green are two of 56 people murdered in Mississippi from 1955 through 1977 in killings that were suspected to be ...
The district judge ordered the prison system to continue providing hormone therapy to transgender people as needed, while a ...
The recent swell of clemency activity reflects this new direction. Among those granted clemency this month were Todd and ...
Our founder reflects on the legacy of the reporter who helped set the standard for The Marshall Project’s investigations into ...
On this anniversary of Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, here are six pieces about why it happened ...
Ohio law mandates natural light in housing units in every jail in the state, and the Department of Rehabilitation and ...
Jails are notorious for inhumane conditions. Detainees often complain of violence, inedible food, limited programming and subpar healthcare. Lack of sunlight may be an unexpected addition to the list.
When he took the witness stand in federal court on March 17 in Albany, Michael McCallion was nervous. He had waited three years for this moment, for a chance to hold accountable the men he said ...
This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this delivered to your inbox? Subscribe to future newsletters here. Facial ...
For four years, while incarcerated in Maryland state prison, Alphonso Taylor, 49, said he was the only deaf man in his unit. And he had no way to call or communicate with his loved ones outside of ...