
‘We, Too, Are Targets of Police Violence’
The women left out of national conversations about misconduct and reform
Beyond the age of mass incarceration
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This project is supported by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation’s Safety and Justice Challenge.

The women left out of national conversations about misconduct and reform

The attorney general doesn’t plan on using his oversight authority to monitor and intervene in local departments. Can states compensate for that absence?

The president’s budget proposal calls for the hiring of more prosecutors, more immigration judges, and more federal marshals.

The National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys lobbied against the last major push for criminal-justice reform in Congress. Now their former president is working in the Justice Department.

As assistant secretary in the Department of Homeland Security, Sheriff David Clarke might have less direct authority than he wields over inmates in the county jails.

The U.S. Supreme Court could soon consider whether police can review a cellphone’s whereabouts without a warrant.

As indictments loom over Milwaukee County Jail after a high-profile death in custody, the county’s controversial sheriff is moving into a role in the Department of Homeland Security.

Larry Krasner has big goals for the city’s justice system. But there’s no telling if he’ll succeed where others have failed.

California’s steep penalties help generate funding for government programs. But they’ve come with an additional cost.

A new report finds that the global insurance companies underwriting bonds are reaping their rewards while shouldering virtually none of their risk.