AltWeeklies Wire

There's Little Justice for Incarcerated Womennew

Progress is being made to try to make the criminal justice system more "gender-responsive," but the change is very slow in coming. In the meantime, girls and women locked up in the system often come back to their communities sicker, more miserable and more alienated than before.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Silja JA Talvi  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Will North Carolina Resume Executions or Keep the Ban?new

Now that the legal battle over a doctor's role in death row executions is nearing a conclusion, the issue of capital punishment in North Carolina is about to land in the laps of the 2009 General Assembly and Governor-elect Bev Perdue.
INDY Week  |  Bob Geary  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Drug-War Violence Has the Border Under Siegenew

The current violence is beyond anything anyone has ever seen here before, an epidemic of murder and sadistic violence that's being waged with American weapons and aided by American government dollars, led by forces trained by the American military.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Peter Gorman  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

The Texas Criminal Justice System is Embracing 'The Life Penalty'new

In the execution capital of the free world, death sentences have declined dramatically, thanks in part to the institution of life-without-parole sentences in 2005.
The Texas Observer  |  John Moritz  |  12-03-2008  |  Crime & Justice

The Snowboard Bandits Lived for Excitement, but the FBI Got the Final Thrillnew

Over three months, the Bandits hit eleven banks in Colorado, leaving in their wake empty cash drawers, dazed tellers and surveillance films filled with curiously chic and frustratingly concealing get-ups. The case was quickly handed over to an outfit more likely than any other to catch the Snowboard Bandits: the FBI's Rocky Mountain Safe Streets Task Force.
Westword  |  Joel Warner  |  11-25-2008  |  Crime & Justice

A Stripper, a Mobster, and a Murder (Yep, That's Miami...)new

Jeanette Smith was sodomized, strangled, and tossed into the Everglades.
Miami New Times  |  Natalie O'Neill  |  11-25-2008  |  Crime & Justice

San Diego Nonprofit Coalition Helps Parolees Avoid Returning to Prisonnew

Called "Coming Home to Stay," the program touches on every possible aspect of a returning prisoner's life -- what it takes, step-by-step, to help someone successfully transition from prison to the outside world, from pre-release to post-release to several years out.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Kelly Davis  |  11-19-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Like a Virgin? How Cops Pose as Kids to Catch Internet Pervsnew

Internet sex crimes, I was told, are like crack was in the '80s: unknown and ready to explode. So the first thing I ask Lieutenant Greg Jenkins, head of the Albemarle PD Investigative Division, is, why is all this internet sex stuff such a big deal?
C-Ville Weekly  |  J. Tobias Beard  |  11-19-2008  |  Crime & Justice

The Minneapolis Somali Community is Facing a Dark Web of Murdersnew

They came to escape civil war, so why are they killing each other in the streets?
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Erin Carlyle  |  11-13-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Obama Wusses Out on Gitmo

He promised to shut down Gitmo. But now President-Elect Obama wants to ratify Bush's torture trials.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  11-12-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham: We All Share Blame for Guantanamonew

What really matters now regarding the Cuba-based U.S. detention center, according to a former military attorney who was part of the tribunals there, is simple: The American people could've prevented it and changed it.
Metro Times  |  Staff  |  11-11-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Can a Troubled Colorado Prison Change the Way Inmates Think?new

Director Kevin Estep brought a new approach to the Cheyenne Mountain Re-Entry Center, which requires inmates to forsake the convict code. But not every journey through CMRC has been positive.
Westword  |  Alan Prendergast  |  11-10-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Convicted Rapist Bill Coleman is Starving Himself to Prove His Innocencenew

Coleman began refusing solid food on Sept. 16, 2007, to protest what he claims was his wrongful conviction in 2005 of raping his wife -- he was convicted solely on her testimony, without forensic evidence, and no witnesses were called on his behalf. This September, on the one-year anniversary of his hunger strike, he began refusing liquids as well.
New Haven Advocate  |  Daniel D'Ambrosio  |  11-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

What I Learned While Covering the O.J. Trialnew

The Simpson trial was a cauldron of important life lessons waiting to be learned.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Nick Divito  |  10-17-2008  |  Crime & Justice

How Many Innocent People Has Harris County, Texas, Sent to Prison?new

Texas has experienced 34 DNA exonerations -- more than any other state -- and "these compounding exonerations," as State Senator Rodney Ellis says, "are clear and convincing evidence that our criminal justice system is broken."
Houston Press  |  Randall Patterson  |  10-15-2008  |  Crime & Justice

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