In Los Angeles, thousands of people who live outside have to navigate the insecurities caused by homelessness, the ire of housed neighbors, and the city penalizing them for their circumstances. In one park, months of efforts to remove unhoused people culminated in a showdown with police. Reporter Mark Betancourt investigates in this episode, part one of a two-part series about the criminalization of homelessness.
Find a resource guide and annotated transcript at our website here.
Introducing Still Paying the Price: Reparations in Real Terms
What’s the Public’s Role in Upholding a Broken Criminal Justice System?
How Those Drowning in Carceral Debt Are Lining Others’ Pockets
Why Policing Our Schools Backfires
How Jailhouse Informants Rig the Justice System
Punished and Persecuted for Being Unhoused, Part 2
Grand Juries, the Black Box of Justice Reform?
Highway Robbery: How a Small-town Traffic Trap Became a Legal Black Hole
How Guilty Pleas Fastrack and Derail Justice
They’re Running for Office to Change the Criminal (Injustice) System
Our Final Season Launches October 24!
When a State Treats Drug Addiction Like a Health Issue, Not a Crime
When “Bail Reform” Isn't
Taking Mental Health Crises Out of Police Hands
Forget Reform, They Want Abolition
An Effort to Hold Prosecutors Accountable
We Went Back to See How These Reforms Worked
Why COVID-19 Goes from Jails to Communities
How Black Women Are Rightfully “Taking Seats at the Table”
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Birthful
Our Body Politic
Latina to Latina
College Admissions Decoded
Key Conversations with Phi Beta Kappa