
The False Alarms That Get Kids Arrested
Teens are paying the price for school-shooting threats—whether they’re real or not.
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.

Teens are paying the price for school-shooting threats—whether they’re real or not.

Imprisoned for decades for a crime he committed as a juvenile, “Red Dog” Fennell was released as an old man into a baffling world.

One company has become the biggest provider of jail health care. Sheriffs are worried: “If you’re the only dance in town, you can pretty much call your own shots.”

Why aren’t more cities using it?

FOIA documents and a whistle-blower uncover how the Obama and Trump administrations used solitary in ways that critics say are arbitrary, cruel, and in violation of federal rules.

A campaign for suffrage is growing inside prisons. Is anyone listening?

How a Pakistani-born retired pilot took on a controversial, data-driven policing program in Los Angeles—and won

A set of unusual cases in North Carolina brings new attention to racism in death-penalty trials.

Violence perpetrated by cops doesn’t simply boil down to individual bad actors—it’s also a systemic, judicial failing.

When a Nashville officer killed a black man, his mother and other activists didn’t just seek an indictment—they fought to give citizens oversight of the whole police department.