Episodes

  • Locked In: The Supreme Court Just Slammed the Door on Compassionate Release
    Jun 8 2026
    On May 28, 2026, the Supreme Court issued two back-to-back decisions, Rutherford v. United States and Fernandez v. United States, that fundamentally narrow the grounds on which federal prisoners can seek compassionate release, the mechanism created by the bipartisan First Step Act of 2018 to allow early release for extraordinary and compelling circumstances. The Court ruled that prisoners cannot use compassionate release to argue they were sentenced under laws Congress has since made more lenient, nor can they use it to claim actual innocence, closing off two of the most significant pathways advocates had fought to establish. This episode breaks down what these rulings actually mean, who gets hurt, and why the fight over who controls the exits from federal prison is one of the most consequential and underreported battles in American criminal justice.
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    7 mins
  • The Washington Sentencing Scandal: How a Computer Glitch Freed Thousands Early and What It Reveals About Justice System Vulnerabilities
    Jun 2 2026
    In 2015, Washington State officials revealed that a long-standing computer error in the Department of Corrections’ sentencing calculations had resulted in the early release of approximately 3,200 inmates over more than a decade due to excessive “good time” credits. This systemic flaw exposed critical weaknesses in how sentences are computed and administered, prompting immediate fixes and reviews. This episode explores the origins and impacts of the scandal while examining the current state of sentencing accuracy, technological safeguards, and ongoing risks of mistaken releases in U.S. correctional systems
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    4 mins
  • Inside the Oregon Prison Data Breach: Insider Threats and the Fragile Trust in Corrections Systems
    May 31 2026
    A former employee at Oregon’s largest prison, Snake River Correctional Institution, improperly accessed more than 33,000 files containing sensitive personal information on staff, inmates, vendors, and visitors over a six-month period. Discovered in January 2026 during a misconduct investigation, the breach underscores persistent vulnerabilities to insider threats within correctional agencies. This episode examines the incident’s details, potential consequences, systemic implications, and broader lessons for data security in justice institutions.1
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    3 mins
  • Deputy Probation Officer: Inside the High-Stakes World of Reentry & Supervision
    May 18 2026
    What really happens when people leave prison and return to the community under intense state supervision? In this raw episode, a Deputy Probation Officer pulls back the curtain on daily operations, high-stakes crisis management, massive caseloads, and the tough balance between public safety, legal accountability, and offender rehabilitation. Get an unfiltered look at the frontlines of the modern justice system — where one decision can change everything.
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    1 hr
  • Reforming American Prisons: Norway-Inspired Pilots in North Dakota, Oregon, and Pennsylvania
    May 5 2026
    This episode examines targeted efforts by three U.S. states to adapt elements of Norway’s rehabilitative correctional model, focusing on dynamic security, reduced isolation, and dignity-centered programming in North Dakota, Oregon, and Pennsylvania’s Little Scandinavia unit. It reviews documented outcomes, including declines in violence, improved staff and resident well-being, and operational improvements, while candidly addressing why full replication remains challenging. Listeners will gain a precise, evidence-based assessment of the pilots’ promise and the broader structural barriers rooted in societal, economic, and systemic differences between Norway and the United States.
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    8 mins
  • The “Pseudo-Family” Structure in Women’s Prisons: Domestic Roles as Coping and Support Systems
    May 3 2026
    Explore the distinct social organization in women’s correctional facilities, where inmates frequently form pseudo-families—adopting roles as mothers, fathers, siblings, and grandparents—to recreate domestic support structures absent in the outside world.
This episode contrasts these relational networks with the gang-based hierarchies typical in men’s prisons and examines the psychological, emotional, and adaptive functions of pseudo-family dynamics in mitigating the pains of imprisonment.
Essential listening for correctional professionals, criminologists, psychologists, social workers, and students of gender and incarceration seeking evidence-based insight into female prison culture and rehabilitation strategies.
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    5 mins
  • Prison Argot: The Hidden Language of Survival
    Apr 26 2026
    Prisons develop their own hidden language—but it’s far more than slang. This episode breaks down key terms like “kites,” “dry snitching,” and “road dogs,” while exploring how language functions as a barrier, a filter, and a survival tool. Inside prison walls, knowing what words mean isn’t just useful—it can determine where you stand.
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    5 mins
  • Riot at Wasco State Prison-Reception Center: 48 Inmates Involved, Three Hospitalized
    4 mins