AltWeeklies Wire

Denver's Rent-a-Copsnew

The city's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
Westword  |  Luke Turf  |  04-21-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Cracking the Gangbangers' Code of Silencenew

Informants are blowing Seattle murder cases wide open.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  04-21-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Inmates Have No Right to Starve to Deathnew

Washington's State Supreme Court won't allow convict to "let nature take its course."
Seattle Weekly  |  Laura Onstot  |  04-21-2008  |  Crime & Justice

The Strange and Violent World of St. Louis' Bail Bondsmennew

"To my knowledge, I know of no other state that allows felons to be licensed as bail bondsmen," says Bill Kreins, spokesman for the Professional Bail Agents of the United States. "Convicted felons absolutely should not be in the bail bond business. They just do not fit."
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  04-18-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Judge Arrington's Truth vs. the Media's Spinnew

The judge had a difficult message for black men; too bad the press missed the point.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  John F. Sugg  |  04-16-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Do Sex Offender Registries Work?new

The term "sex offender" conjures a kind of monolithic image -- one that's reinforced by the news media and tough-on-crime politicians, despite evidence to the contrary. Misperception and fear, rather than good empirical research, seem to be what drives sex-offender laws. A case in point is a new law that takes effect this week in San Diego.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Kelly Davis  |  04-16-2008  |  Crime & Justice

If it Looks Like a Lawyer and Quacks Like a Lawyer, Is It Really a Lawyer?new

In the days before his arrest last fall, Robert Charles Jones Brady seemed to have ended up where he always wanted to be: in the company of the rich and well-connected. But what leaps had he taken to get there?
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Deirdra Funcheon  |  04-15-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Rational Decisions: Inside Baltimore's Mental Health Courtnew

Modeled after drug court, it is considered a "problem-solving court." But unlike its larger and older brother, mental health court has not strained under political pressure or the sheer number of cases, so far avoiding mandatory sentencing and other legislative restrictions.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Laura Laing  |  04-15-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Why Guns Keep Falling into the Wrong Handsnew

Gaps in a system intended to keep guns out of the wrong hands have led to tragedies around the state and country.
San Luis Obispo New Times  |  Ed Connolly  |  04-14-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Meet Washington's DUI Kingnew

A new state law may finally catch up with Bob Castle.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  04-14-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Two Young Filmmakers Document Philly's Crime Epidemicnew

"By the Numbers," a new public service announcement by filmmakers Alec Sutherland and Todd DosSantos and a local organization called the Anti-Violence Partnership, is just a minute long, but it's well worth watching.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Tasneem Paghdiwala  |  04-14-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Vermont Bill to Help Children of Incarcerated Parents Moves Forwardnew

Vermont currently has no mandatory training or statewide protocols that address how police deal with children at the time of a parent's arrest. But a new bill, one of four such pieces of pending legislation, would mandate a study of prevailing practices around the state.
Seven Days  |  Ken Picard  |  04-14-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Paul House is Free at Lastnew

Saying that the 22-year incarceration of Paul House was the result of an unfair trial, a federal judge this week ordered the state to release the man who DNA evidence and the U.S. Supreme Court say probably didn't do the crime.
Nashville Scene  |  Sarah Kelley  |  04-11-2008  |  Crime & Justice

New Mexico Prison Activist Plans New Group for Familiesnew

Tilda Sosaya's new group, Prisoners and Families United, is the successor to the Committee on Prison Accountability, which eventually went under in 2002 amid internal divisions. "I feel that prisoners and their families still need a voice," she says, adding that the "fundamental purpose" of the group will be to organize released prisoners and their families.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  David Alire Garcia  |  04-11-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Forty Years After Her Murder, Peggy Reber May be Exhumednew

Authorities are considering exhuming the body of Margaret Lynn "Peggy" Reber, a teenager whose sadistic torture and murder nearly 40 years ago remains unsolved. However, the exhumation was just one of a number of recent dramatic twists in the more than two-year reinvestigation by local police.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Kevin Uhrich and Martha Shaak  |  04-11-2008  |  Crime & Justice

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