Posted inCriminal Justice, Partner Content, Policing

If Mental Health Responders – Not Police – Had Come to Marquis Rivera’s Home, Would He Be Alive Today?

This story, originally published by MindSite News, is the latest installment of Fateful Encounters, an ongoing investigative collaboration between MindSite News, the Medill Investigative Lab-Chicago at Northwestern University and other media outlets exploring police response to mental health crises. This work is generously supported by the Sozosei Foundation. Marquis Rivera was going to kill himself.  […]

Posted inIncarceration, Partner Content

The Push to Investigate the Experiences of Incarcerated Women

Originally published by The 19th Women represent only about 10% of incarcerated people in the United States. Because of that, most criminal legal research and reform proposals overlook their specific needs.  A growing number of researchers and advocates are pushing to change this. They’re calling for a more intentional focus on the factors that lead […]

Posted inCriminal Justice

Kamala Harris’ ‘Top Cop’ Legacy Is Complicated

Five years ago, when Kamala Harris was running for president, she labeled herself the “top cop” and “progressive prosecutor” that was “tough on crime.” With that came backlash from some criminal justice reform advocates and even those in law enforcement. In 2024, it’s unclear where she stands ideologically as vice president. Yet in her first […]

Posted inClimate Change, Criminal Justice, Environmental Justice, Incarceration

The Growing Crisis of Heatwave Deaths in America’s Prisons

Last September, at his graduation from Northwestern University, Michael Broadway reconnected with his mother, Elizabeth, for the first time in two decades. Due to her ailing health, she couldn’t visit him. As an incarcerated man, he didn’t have the option to travel to her, either.  For those two decades, Broadway was held inside Stateville Correctional […]

Posted inCriminal Justice

Maryland Governor’s Marijuana Pardons a Win for Justice, But Is It Enough?

Stephanie Shepard has had unsettling feelings in the pit of her stomach ever since she was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for conspiracy to distribute marijuana. She couldn’t believe that a drug sentence’s mandatory minimum carried more weight than a homicide-related offense.  Before Shepard was transferred from New York to a […]

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