The DOJ found that the state must make community-based services accessible so that physically disabled children can avoid being segregated in nursing facilities.
A new HBO documentary set for release later this year exposes the violence inside Alabama prisons using leaked cellphone video. 'The Alabama Solution' premiered
Two Fairhope sisters were convicted on multiple charges in a murder-for-hire scheme, according to the United States Department of Justice. According to a USDOJ news
Directors Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman sat down at our studio in Park City to discuss their remarkable investigative documentary.
Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman chronicle financial mismanagement, abuses of power and general inhumanities in a system allegedly designed for rehabilitation.
"Incarcerated men defy the odds to expose a cover-up in America's deadliest prison system," reads the logline for the HBO-backed documentary "The Alabama Solution." But that does not begin to describe this powerful and extremely necessary call-to-action.
Sisters Judy Owen, 61, and Mitzy Smith, 54, of Fairhope, were found guilty by a federal jury this week on conspiracy to commit murder for hire, transfer of a firearm in furtherance of a felony and murder for hire, according to a release from the U.S Department of Justice.
The indictment alleges former Crenshaw County Jail administrator Christian Alexander Porter assaulted a handcuffed and compliant inmate.
MONTGOMERY — Alabama children with physical disabilities are being unnecessarily institutionalized in nursing homes, the U.S. Justice Department said Thursday, warning it would file suit against ...
A federal grand jury indicted a former jail administrator on charges of beating a handcuffed incarcerated person in an Alabama jail and then lying about it to state and federal law enforcement, the Justice Department announced Tuesday.
On his first day in office in his second term, President Donald Trump issued sweeping pardons to 1,500 people convicted of crimes tied to the January 6, 2021, attack at the United States Capitol
Rachel England of Demopolis has been appointed by Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey as the district attorney in the 17th judicial circuit. She’s now the youngest D.A. in the state. At 29-years old, England is not only the youngest district attorney in Alabama, but also the first female D.A. in the three counties that make up the 17th district.