Should This Inmate Get a State-Financed Sex Change Operation?
The complicated case of Michelle Kosilek, a murderer fighting for sexual reassignment surgery.
The complicated case of Michelle Kosilek, a murderer fighting for sexual reassignment surgery.
Nathaniel Penn The New Republic Oct 2013 20min Permalink
A profile of the NFL quarterback gone bust.
John Cagney Nash Playboy Sep 2013 20min Permalink
Billy Dillon was about to sign a contract with the Detroit Tigers. Instead he was convicted–wrongly–of first-degree murder and spent the next 27 years in prison.
Brandon Sneed SB Nation Aug 2013 35min Permalink
After a botched bank robbery in 1990, Sture Bergwall, aka Thomas Quick, confessed to a string of brutal crimes. He admitted to stabbings, stranglings, incest and cannibalism. He was convicted of eight murders in all, and after the final trial he went silent for nearly a decade. But a few years ago, Bergwall came forward again—there was one more secret he had to tell.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2013 45min Permalink
Listening to music in prison.
David Peisner Spin May 2013 10min Permalink
The story of a St. Louis handball court.
Jessica Lussenhop Riverfront Times Jun 2013 Permalink
Ana Montes was a decorated U.S. intelligence analyst. She was also a Cuban spy.
Jim Popkin Washington Post Magazine Apr 2013 25min Permalink
Covering an election in Peru’s largest prison.
Daniel Alarcón Harper's Feb 2012 35min Permalink
The author on his 25 years in solitary confinement.
William Blake Solitary Watch Mar 2013 15min Permalink
The enduring disadvantage of getting locked up.
John Tierney New York Times Jan 2013 10min Permalink
The early life of “the onetime Black Panther, protégé of George Jackson, and sole member of the San Quentin Six convicted of murder.”
Chip Brown Esquire Jan 1988 35min Permalink
Why Iran punished two leading AIDS doctors.
Tina Rosenberg Prospect Sep 2012 Permalink
An inmate’s protest.
Ann Neumann Guernica Jan 2013 20min Permalink
On prison tourism.
S.J. Culver Guernica Dec 2012 25min Permalink
Each year, thousands of people pay to play eighteen holes of golf at Angola, “the largest maximum-security prison in the country.”
Josh Begley Tomorrow Nov 2012 10min Permalink
“For hours, days, I fixated on the patch of sunlight cast against my wall through those barred and grated windows. When, after five weeks, my knees buckled and I fell to the ground utterly broken, sobbing and rocking to the beat of my heart, it was the patch of sunlight that brought me back.”
Shane Bauer Mother Jones Oct 2012 10min Permalink
A family’s struggle with mental illness and the criminal justice system.
Brantley Hargrove Dallas Observer Sep 2012 25min Permalink
Did a handsome young Green Beret doctor kill his pregnant wife and two daughters? Or, as he claims, did a group of candle-carrying hippies carry out a vicious home invasion while chanting “Acid is groovy, kill the pigs”? A mystery that spanned three decades.
Robert Sam Anson Vanity Fair Jul 1998 40min Permalink
Greg Ousley killed his parents and has been locked up for nineteen years.
Is that enough?
Scott Anderson New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 15min Permalink
John MacNeil was convicted by the state of Massachusetts of second-degree murder. He was given a life sentence. He escaped. He was caught. Through an incredible feat of jailhouse lawyering, he somehow got himself paroled and exiled to Canada. Then he came home.
David L. Yas Boston Magazine Nov 2001 15min Permalink
A three-part investigation into New Jersey’s halfway house system.
Sam Dolnick New York Times Jun 2012 55min Permalink
A multi-part series exploring Louisiana’s role as “the world’s prison capital.”
Cindy Chang, Jan Moller, John Simerman, Jonathan Tilove Times-Picayune May 2012 2h Permalink
On the escape of hundreds of insurgents from Kandahar’s Sarposa Prison through a tunnel dug from the outside, and an unlikely suspect: the jail’s former warden.
Luke Mogelson GQ Jun 2012 25min Permalink
How a convicted sexual predator emptied the bank accounts and ruined the lives of several women from behind bars.
Caleb Hannan Seattle Weekly Jan 2011 Permalink
The story of Trina Garnett, “one of approximately 470 prisoners in Pennsylvania serving life without parole for crimes they committed as teenagers.”
Liliana Segura The Nation May 2012 15min Permalink