Copy permalink to clipboard
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2w ago
..read more
Visit website
Share to Twitter
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2w ago
..read more
Visit website
Share via Email
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2w ago
..read more
Visit website
Share to Facebook
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2w ago
..read more
Visit website
There have been at least 24 heat-related deaths inside Texas’ uncooled prisons over the past two decades. After fighting a lawsuit over the issue for four years, the Texas prison system was finally forced into a settlement last year that mandated air conditioning for medically vulnerable inmates—an agreement prison officials kept getting dragged back into court for breaking this year. As 2019 ends, Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) officials stand accused of lying to cover up..
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2y ago
lying to cover up prison temperatures ..read more
Visit website
In more Harris County news, this year officials settled a landmark lawsuit over bail policies that keep low-level defendants in jail because they’re poor, ushering in reforms that were largely made possible thanks to a Democratic sweep in the 2018 midterms.
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2y ago
..read more
Visit website
Although that settlement established sweeping new protections, reformers see their victory in Harris County as just the first step. The same legal team that successfully reformed the county’s misdemeanor bail policies filed a second lawsuit challenging how judges decide bail at the felony level. Similar lawsuits have been filed in Dallas and Galveston counties too.
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2y ago
..read more
Visit website
Last year, the Dallas Police Department created a special team comprised of an officer, paramedic, and social worker to patrol South Central Dallas, an area with a high concentration of mental health-related police calls. That pilot program, aimed at putting people in treatment rather than jail, appears to be working enough for Dallas to try expanding the program citywide.
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2y ago
..read more
Visit website
In Memory of Santos Rodriguez
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
2y ago
On July 24, 1973, Dallas police were called to investigate the theft of $8 from a gas station vending machine in Little Mexico, a Mexican American community in ..read more
Visit website
Home, But Not Free: NSA Whistleblower Reality Winner Adjusts to Her Release From Prison
The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice
by
3y ago
By Taylor Barnes. Originally published on July 10, 2021. Republished with permission from The Intercept, an award-winning nonprofit news organization dedicated ..read more
Visit website

Follow The Texas Observer » Criminal Justice on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR