incarceration
Incarceration, rehabilitation, recidivism: The reality of prison life and what it's like to be an inmate locked up behind bars.
Russian "consultants" tried for plotting to destabilize Angola
In August 2025, Angolan police stormed an apartment rented by two Russian nationals in central Luanda. The men - who were in the country as "tourists" - were actually operatives in a sophisticated plot to destabilize one of Africa's most resource-rich nations.
By Aurel Stratanabout 17 hours ago in Criminal
The Serial Killer . Content Warning.
Why America's Most Prolific Murderer Wanted to Be Caught THE CONFESSION NOBODY BELIEVED 😱 On a quiet Tuesday evening in November 2009 a man walked into a police station in Hammond, Indiana, sat down across from the desk sergeant and calmly announced that he had killed multiple women over a span of two decades and that he was tired of carrying the weight of what he had done and wanted to confess everything before he lost the courage to tell the truth, and the desk sergeant who had been processing paperwork and who initially assumed this was either a prank or a mentally ill person seeking attention asked the man to wait while he called a detective, and the man who identified himself as Darren Deon Vann sat patiently in the lobby of the police station like someone waiting for an appointment at the dentist while inside the detective division officers debated whether to take the confession seriously, and they decided to interview him primarily because Indiana law required them to investigate any confession regardless of how improbable it seemed, and what unfolded over the next forty-eight hours of interrogation would reveal one of the most prolific serial killers in Indiana history and would raise disturbing questions about how he had operated for so long without detection in communities where women disappeared regularly and where law enforcement had not connected the cases because the victims were poor, Black, and involved in sex work, demographics that American criminal justice systems have historically treated as less worthy of investigation and protection than other victim populations 🚔
By The Curious Writer2 days ago in Criminal
Top 10 Most Dangerous Terrorists Held On Bombers Row In ADX Florence Supermax
10 - Richard Reid Born in 1973 in Bromley, London, Reid's early life was a roadmap of instability with a father frequently in prison, a school dropout by 16, and a string of petty crimes that eventually landed him in Feltham Young Offenders Institute.
By Vidello Productions3 days ago in Criminal
Restorative Justice, Without the Hype
A victim leaves court with paperwork in hand, a case number attached to the worst day of her life, and a strange empty feeling she did not expect. The offender was processed. The lawyers spoke. The judge ruled. The file moved. From the outside, the system did what it was built to do. From the inside, a lot of people still walk away feeling as though the central fact never got touched. Harm happened. Everybody talked around it.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin4 days ago in Criminal
UN Declares Transatlantic Slave Trade the Gravest Crime Against Humanity. Content Warning.
April 2, 2026 In a watershed moment for international justice and historical accountability, the United Nations General Assembly has formally recognized the transatlantic slave trade as the gravest crime against humanity. The resolution, adopted by a vote of 123 in favor, 3 against, with multiple abstentions, marks one of the most consequential acknowledgments in the UN’s history—one that confronts centuries of denial, erasure, and unresolved harm.
By TREYTON SCOTT5 days ago in Criminal









