
When Does the Right to an Attorney Kick In?
Despite the Sixth Amendment, in many jurisdictions, defendants don’t get legal representation the first time they go to court.
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.

Despite the Sixth Amendment, in many jurisdictions, defendants don’t get legal representation the first time they go to court.

Apple’s new Face ID technology raises questions about constitutional protections for personal devices.

A Florida sheriff department's plan to check warrants at shelters could risk lives among evacuees and first responders alike.

When DNA evidence exonerated two men convicted in a 1987 murder, one took his chances on a retrial to overturn his conviction. The other accepted a special deal and left prison immediately—as a convicted killer.

The average prisoner has neither the power to compel transportation to court nor the money to hire an attorney. But one Chicago court may have found a fix.

A forensic veterinarian is on a mission to convince law enforcement that people who harm pets often commit other serious crimes.

A new high-security facility in Auckland flips the incentives on for-profit incarceration to keep inmates from returning.

A Q&A with Georgetown University professor Marc Morjé Howard on parole boards’ incentive to keep inmates in jail

Trump picked the notorious Arizona lawman for his first-ever act of presidential absolution.

Neo-Nazis and counter-protesters alike think that local and state police should have done a better job keeping violence from breaking out over the weekend.