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- Sex, drugs and a gruesome murder. An edgy one night stand turns into a nightmare for Aditya, when he wakes up with blood on his hands. The evidence is stacked against him, but he doesn't remember the grisly crime. Is he guilty or not ?
- Drama series following people accused of crimes and their journey through the British Criminal Justice System.
- Madhav Mishra is back to fight his toughest case yet nothing is simple and straightforward. Will justice win?
- Anuradha Chandra stabs her perfect lawyer husband one fateful night and confesses to her crime. However, it is anything but an open and shut case.
- Denise Moore is robbed and her face is slashed as she is leaving a crack house. At the police station she picks Jessie Williams mug shot and ID's him at a line up. Jessie Williams says he didn't do it. From that point on, everyone is pushing him to make a deal, and plea to a lesser crime, to avoid a possible long term sentence.
- From PBS: At the end of WWII the Allies declared the Nazi party a criminal organization, and pledged to prosecute and punish the architects and triggermen of genocide. It was an ambitious pledge: several hundred thousand Gestapo, SS, and Wehrmacht forces had engaged in war crimes and atrocities against civilians. But only a few thousand Nazi criminals and collaborators were convicted at the Nuremberg trials. This paled with the legions who evaded prosecution by concealing their war records, assuming false identities, fleeing Europe, or serving Allied governments as spies or scientists. In the absence of an international manhunt and centralized prosecution, the task of bringing Nazi criminals to justice was undertaken by a handful of individuals-acting without official status or government support. These so-called Nazi hunters collectively identified and brought to justice thousands of Nazi criminals. In the process, the Nazi hunters gave a measure of dignity to the dead and reminded the international community that enemies of humanity must be punished--if humanity is to survive. Narrated by Candice Bergen, this is an unprecedented examination of the six-decade global hunt for the 20th century's greatest criminals. Featuring intimate portraits of the Nazi hunters, the film also examines the nations and institutions that helped bring war criminals to justice-or, in too many cases, helped them to escape. This program contains material that may not be appropriate for all viewers. Viewer discretion is advised.
- Greg's story is one of wrong turns, bad luck, and a loving, supportive family who never stopped believing in his innocence. It is also the story of the incredible people who have worked tirelessly to reform North Carolina's criminal justice system - reforms that led to securing Greg's freedom.
- The project began as a way to explore, educate about, and advocate change around the overcrowding in the Philadelphia jail system. It has come to focus on mass incarceration across the nation and the intersection of race, poverty, and the criminal justice and penal systems. The documentary centers around Michelle Alexander's theory in her book, The New Jim Crow: since the rise of the drug war and explosion of prison populations, because discretion within the system allows for prosecution of people of color at disproportionately high rates, mass incarceration is a new version of Jim Crow. The movie also dissects the War on Drugs and 'tough on crime' movement, and offers possible reforms and solutions to ending mass incarceration and this new racial caste system.
- When it comes to shifting from an over-reliance on incarceration to community-based solutions for violence, you have to get creative. Oakland groups knew there were better, safer solutions than mass incarceration happening at the community-level and community leaders came together to develop a proposal for a parcel tax and parking surcharge to fund violence prevention, additional police officers, and fire service. Developed with the fundamental belief that challenges can be overcome through trusting and caring relationships, even with the highest risk youth and young adults, these measures have fundamentally changed the justice landscape in Oakland.
- 2016–TV EpisodeTough punishment policies and mass incarceration have led to social and economic problems for inmates, their families and the greater community, while not impacting crime rates as hoped. As the U.S. leads the world in the number of people behind bars, 4 experts discuss solutions at a historic venue: the Eastern State Penitentiary, now a museum and landmark that features the cell (complete with oriental rug and secretary desk) where Al Capone was held. Eastern was considered the first "modern" prison with a radial design that was architecturally copied throughout the world.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThis week I had the pleasure of sitting down with NYU Professor Terrance Coffie. Watch while we discuss Criminal and Social Justice Reform and everything that surrounds it. Plus we talk about his upcoming conference and more.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2019–Podcast EpisodeThe majority of women who are incarcerated have been victims of violence and/or abuse, and Donna Hylton is working to change that. Hylton is best known for her social justice activism, serving as one of the key drivers in the Less Is More NY Bill, the passage of the Domestic Violence Survivors' Justice Act, and participating in the successful Close Rikers campaign. Now, she's fighting for the 90-percent of incarcerated women and girls who experience violence and sexual assault. She joins Mark to discuss her recently established non-profit, A Little Piece of Light (the same name as her memoir), which is looking to provide comprehensive support for women, girls, transgender, and non-conforming individuals whose lives have been impacted by trauma and incarceration.
- 2019–TV Episode
- 2011–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2020)2018–TV Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast Episode
- When a young man accidentally shoots a cop in self-defense and goes on the run, the team members find themselves in a moral dilemma on the best way to carry out justice; Barnes and her wife struggle with their plans to have another child.
- A murder trial is delayed and the suspect is released on bail after Stella discovers that the district attorney in the case tampered with the crime scene for personal gain.
- 2015–Podcast Episode
- 2014–Podcast Episode
- 2021–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2020–Podcast Episode
- Steve and Pete provide updates on the upcoming NBA and NFL seasons before welcoming Senator Cory Booker to discuss player exploitation in the NCAA, his fight for criminal justice reform, expanding economic opportunity, and environmental reform. Later he talks about what it was like speaking as a Black man on the Senate floor, his experiences in politics, the complicity of America, and how individuals can help build a better nation.
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- 2021–Podcast Episode
- 2012–Podcast Episode
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- Penn and Teller show that the criminal justice system is broken, and that forensic science is far from perfect.
- 2005–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2017–Podcast Episode
- 2018–Podcast Episode