AltWeeklies Wire

In Life and Death, Tattoo Artist Kauri Tiyme Made Her Marknew

Kauri was an artist. She put ink under people's skin and transformed them. In many ways, she was her own finest achievement. Not just the tattoos; she had made her own body a canvas for others, but anyone can do that. What she did was much edgier, more daring. She changed her name, her identity, her ideas as she saw fit.
Westword  |  Alan Prendergast  |  01-12-2009  |  Crime & Justice

Jerry Hancock Moves from Law Enforcement to Prison Ministrynew

Much of what the Rev. Jerry Hancock has to say about the criminal justice system sounds reasonable coming from a clergyman who heads a prison ministry program. But when you consider that he's spent more than 30 years as a lawyer in this system, many of them as a prosecutor, his perspective is positively stunning.
Isthmus  |  Esty Dinur  |  01-05-2009  |  Crime & Justice

Cornerback Dwayne Goodrich: 'The Cowboy Who Killed Those Kids'new

Former cornerback Dwayne Goodrich comes to grips with his hit-and-run of three Good Samaritans as he plans for life after prison.
Dallas Observer  |  Richie Whitt  |  12-22-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Victims of a Bolivian Massacre Seek Justice in Miaminew

It has been five years since Bolivian soldiers killed Marlene Rojas Mamani in the village of Warisata. Today her parents have come to Miami seeking justice.
Miami New Times  |  Tim Elfrink  |  12-22-2008  |  International

The Scalawags of San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharfnew

With its criminals and poachers, its deviants and scalawags, Fisherman's Wharf is in fact a far more interesting -- if disquieting -- place than any travel brochure would have tourists believe.
SF Weekly  |  Ashley Harrell  |  12-17-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Justice Is Curbed in the Peggy Reber Casenew

Will a conflict of interest keep a small town from reaching closure on a 40-year-old murder mystery?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Kevin Uhrich and Martha Shaak  |  12-17-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Funds Cut for Campus Assault Preventionnew

Combating sexual assault is especially tough if your workspace is the size of a professional basketball player's shoebox.
Boston Phoenix  |  Sara Faith Alterman  |  12-12-2008  |  Education

The Nation's Oldest Death Row Inmate Will Never Be Executednew

Officially, the state of Arizona still wants to put Leroy Nash to death, but the odds of Nash actually ever being executed seem to be less than slim.
Phoenix New Times  |  Paul Rubin  |  12-09-2008  |  Crime & Justice

High-Class Heists: Art Crime is on the Risenew

South Florida is a global center in the international art crime circuit -- an enterprise that accounts for more than $6 billion a year, more than the cross-border trade of diamonds, sex, or hot cars.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Tim Elfrink  |  12-09-2008  |  Art

In Texas, Restitution for Victims is Nothing but a State-Sanctioned Scamnew

More than 90 percent of Texas parolees walk away without paying off what the state ordered them to.
Houston Press  |  Chris Vogel  |  12-09-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Angela Crafton Brings Unusual Cred to Philly's Prison Arts Programnew

Crafton has taught mural painting to Philadelphia prison system inmates for the past five years. But a decade ago, she was incarcerated herself.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Frank Rubino  |  12-08-2008  |  Art

Oregon Eco-Activist Sent to Secretive New Prisonnew

The federal government has begun creating special prison units for terrorists, and eco-saboteur Daniel McGowan has been sent to the newest "communication management unit" (CMU) in Marion, Ill., possibly in retaliation for his continued environmental activism while behind bars.
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  12-07-2008  |  Civil Liberties

Boy Killer Mitchell Johnson Speaksnew

On March 24, 1998, the 13-year-old Johnson helped murder four of his classmates and a teacher. Now, his account is public.
Arkansas Times  |  David Koon  |  12-05-2008  |  Crime & Justice

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

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