What We're Reading

News that caught our attention or cited the Texas Justice Initiative from across the Lone Star State and beyond.
  • Locked Up And Left To Die

    Locked Up And Left To Die

    Published on November 1, 2021

    Reporters Michael Barajas and Sophie Novack report on the Texas Rangers' death investigations for the hundreds of people who've died in Texas jails, revealing, "how Texas' patchwork regulatory system repeatedly fails to ensure safe conditions behind bars."

  • Some States Are Cloaking Prison COVID Data

    Some States Are Cloaking Prison COVID Data

    Published on October 27, 2021

    Stateline reporter Michael Ollove digs into data on COVID-19 in Texas' prisons, and specifically, on the difference between the Texas Department of Criminal Justice's dashboard and TJI's data, which comes from state-mandated custodial death reports.

  • Prison staff death toll spikes after state relaxes coronavirus precautions behind bars

    Prison staff death toll spikes after state relaxes coronavirus precautions behind bars

    Published on October 7, 2021

    Lauren McGaughy reports on the rise of COVID-19-related deaths of staff members at Texas prisons – there were 13 fatalities last month alone, marking "the deadliest month for prison staff since the pandemic began."

  • They Investigate Police Killings. Their Record Is Wanting.

    They Investigate Police Killings. Their Record Is Wanting.

    Published on September 25, 2021

    Reporters Michael LaForgia and Jennifer Valentino-DeVries examined thousands of records related to Texas Rangers investigations of custodial deaths in Texas. "The Times found that state investigations can be afflicted by the same shortcuts and pro-police biases that outside interventions are meant to eliminate," the story states.

  • ‘Shooting First And Asking Questions Later’

    ‘Shooting First And Asking Questions Later’

    Published on August 13, 2021

    Staff at The Marshall Project and the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting spent a year examining fatal shootings by police in rural America. "Although the rate of rural police shootings was about 30% lower than the urban rate when adjusted for population," the report states, "the rural incidents mirrored many of the dynamics of police shootings that have come under scrutiny in cities."