
This new project aims to free wrongfully convicted in Indiana
The Indiana Innocence Project will represent wrongfully convicted people and seek their exoneration.
The Indiana Innocence Project will represent wrongfully convicted people and seek their exoneration.
“The systems do everything in their power to keep us from one another, so obviously they know something that we might not know: that we can win.”
James Baldwin theorized white supremacy as the psychology of empire.
Over 40% of the proposed budget will go towards IMPD, sheriffs, the prosecutor’s office, and similar departments.
On Aug. 12, we proved that “No business as usual during a genocide” is more than just a slogan.
This introduction follows the threads of development between George Jackson and Shaka A. Shakur.
The system maintains its violent brutality against Black people, but our greatest weapon is learning from past struggles.
A diverse grouping of artists, organizers, and educators discuss the centrality of disability to the carceral state.
Read the impressive gains our people made in July through unity, dedication, and commitment.