Great article from several months ago that pretty much exactly predicted what would happen here
thebaffler.com/latest/payin...
Great article from several months ago that pretty much exactly predicted what would happen here
thebaffler.com/latest/payin...
Later this month, SCOTUS will hear Pitchford's case. It has numerous issues, from jailhouse informants to undisclosed evidence. But at the heart of the case is Mississippi's failure to grapple with its enduring crisis of Black people struck from its juries. 7/7
mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
The @mississippitoday.org analysis also found that MS prosecutors struck Black people from juries for "strange hair," a bad "vibe," living in a "high crime area," or claiming (often w/o evidence) that a Black juror was a "known drug user" or an alcoholic. 6/7 mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
A @mississippitoday.org analysis of criminal appeals considered by the Mississippi Supreme Court between 2015 and 2025 finds that during that period the court hasn’t provided relief in a single claim where strikes of Black jurors were raised. 5/7 mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
But relief for Terry Pitchford+other defendants who claimed state prosecutors illegally struck Black people from their juries was elusive. In 2023, Justice Sonia Sotomayor blasted the MS Supreme Court for disregarding the SCOTUS decision in Flowers entirely. 4/7 mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
Evans became one of America's most notorious prosecutors+Flowers went to SCOTUS in 2019 where the court decided in his favor. “The State employed its peremptory strikes to remove as many black prospective jurors as possible," wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh. 3/7 mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
From 1997-2014, Evans tried Curtis Flowers for the same murders six times, each time with an all-white or majority-white jury who sentenced him to death. But things seemingly began to change after the popular 2018 podcast about Flowers, "In The Dark." 2/7
mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
New: In 2006, Terry Pitchford went to trial in a capital case in Mississippi where prosecutor Doug Evans struck all about one Black juror. Since then Evans+the state have become notorious for striking Black people from juries+blocking post-conviction relief. 1/7 mississippitoday.org/2026/03/12/m...
A Mississippi death penalty jury was seated. With one Black juror.
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear an appeal this month from death row inmate Terry Pitchford who was denied relief by the Mississippi Supreme Court after his attorneys claimed Black people were illegally struck from his jury. A…
A WSJ investigation tracked the U.S. citizens caught in the crosshairs of an aggressive federal campaign to detain and demonize dissenters. on.wsj.com/3PoQMj5
The N.O. jail’s population limit is 1,250. It was above that throughout last year.
New Orleans’ jail population remained well above its legally mandated cap in 2025. Is a recent decline progress—or an outlier?
News: In 2019, the New Orleans City Council capped the population of the city's jail system at 1,250 people. A new data analysis from @veritenews.org finds that excluding the height of the COVID-19 pandemic the jail has largely exceeded that cap—especially in 2025.
veritenews.org/2026/03/04/n...
Mahmoud Khalil has filed a brief before the Board of Immigration Appeals, challenging orders by an executive-branch judge his team says were rushed, procedurally irregular, inaccurate, and disregarded the Trump admin's retaliation for 1A-protected activity www.nyclu.org/uploads/2025...
Obviously reading any Pam Colloff piece is a must but also be on the lookout for Justine van der Leun’s outstanding new book, UNREASONABLE WOMEN, which will be published in June. Criminalized survival is a scourge.
My latest, with @propublica.org + @nytimes.com:
An Oklahoma law was supposed to help reduce the sentences of domestic violence survivors who fought back -- women who are serving long sentences for killing their abusers. Why are nearly all of them still in prison?
www.propublica.org/article/okla...
NEW: The Victims Who Fought Back
An Oklahoma law was supposed to help reduce the sentences of women who killed their abusers.
Why are nearly all of them still in prison?
By @pamelacolloff.bsky.social
Violent crime dropped sharply across America's biggest cities in 2025, according to new data reviewed by Axios.
Medgar Evers’ killer was a Klansman, but Trump administration says stop calling him a racist
The National Park Service has removed visitor brochures from the Medgar & Myrlie Evers Home National Monument. Among the anticipated changes? No longer calling his murderer a “racist.”
The looming return of Jim Crow to America’s second Blackest state
Louisiana’s political system could soon look more like 1966, the end of the Jim Crow Era, than 2026, and it’s time to acknowledge the full extent of the greatest threat to the American Experiment in decades.
DOJ: The death rate among state prisoners increased 47% between 2019 and 2024 ... The deaths include homicides, suicides and violence, and the report concluded that understaffing and high turnover “likely contribute” to the increase
Louisiana paroles its lowest number of prisoners in 20 years under Gov. Jeff Landry
The state parole board freed 185 prisoners during Landry’s tenure, compared with 858 in the two years before he took office. Hundreds who would have been released under previous governors remain incarcerated with…
Alex Pretti, the man killed by federal agents today in Minneapolis, appears to have been a registered nurse, an athlete, a son and a brother, with ties to Colorado and Wisconsin.
Here is a photo he used for several accounts.
A longtime snitch with an armed robbery conviction told the government that a construction worker with no sheet is a high-ranking Latin King trying to kill Greg Bovino. The “case” fell at trial but the government is trying to deport the man anyway.
www.chicagotribune.com/2026/01/24/m...
We set out to determine how many images of women and girls Grok created during its nudifying spree. What we found was “industrial-scale abuse,” experts said. www.nytimes.com/2026/01/22/t...
Exclusive: Jeffrey Epstein lured some of his victims in the 2000s by promising to help them get into New York University and Columbia University, then sometimes footing the tuition bills.
"A fire heavily damaged Mississippi’s largest synagogue before dawn Saturday – the same house of worship in northeast Jackson that the Ku Klux Klan bombed in 1967 because the rabbi supported civil rights." mississippitoday.org/2026/01/10/f...
Federal agents have shot two people in Portland, just a day after ICE shot and killed a woman in Minnesota. Follow @alexzee.bsky.social for updates. www.opb.org/article/2026...
The woman killed by ICE today was a poet. She won the 2020 Academy of American Poets, University & College Poetry Prize at Old Dominion University.
(And this is Renee from confirmed socials- a photo of a different woman with red lipstick is going around, but that was a classmate.)
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"Baltimore will likely pay a $14 million civil rights settlement to Gary Washington, who was wrongfully convicted of killing a teen in the city in 1986.": www.baltimoresun.com/2026/01/06/b...
Latest: The Justice Department Inspector General released a report detailing a fatal case of medical neglect, where Bureau of Prisons officials let a man waste away from treatable colon cancer.
A federal judge held the BOP in contempt over its treatment of the man. reason.com/2026/01/06/i...