What We're Reading

News that caught our attention or cited the Texas Justice Initiative from across the Lone Star State and beyond.
  • Opinion: How Dallas police are reducing shootings of unarmed citizens

    Opinion: How Dallas police are reducing shootings of unarmed citizens

    Published on January 26, 2021

    John Shjarback (Rowan University), Michael White (Arizona State University) and Stephen Bishopp (UT School of Public Health - Houston and Dallas Police Department) evaluated Dallas PD's "point-and-report policy to see whether shootings went up or down after the 2013 policy.

  • Fatal Police Shootings Of Unarmed Black People Reveal Troubling Patterns

    Fatal Police Shootings Of Unarmed Black People Reveal Troubling Patterns

    Published on January 25, 2021

    Cheryl Thompson reports that NPR dug into police and court records to investigate the deaths of 135 Black Americans who were unarmed when they were shot and killed by law enforcement since 2015. "At least 75% of the officers were white," Thompson reports. "The latest one happened this month in Killeen, Texas, when Patrick Warren Sr., 52, was fatally shot by an officer responding to a mental health call."

  • S4 Bonus: Not a Gotcha or Anti-Policing Sentiment (Analysis)

    S4 Bonus: Not a Gotcha or Anti-Policing Sentiment (Analysis)

    Published on December 28, 2020

    A bonus episode of KXAN's podcast series Catalyst features an in-depth conversation between the series' reporters Josh Hinkle, David Barer and TJI Executive Director Eva Ruth Moravec about TJI and our data collection work. The episode capped off the Catalyst's latest season, which highlights the in-custody death of Herman Titus.

  • Inmates facing big virus risks not near top of vaccine lists

    Inmates facing big virus risks not near top of vaccine lists

    Published on December 16, 2020

    Reporting by Colleen Sleven and Patty Nieberg shows that incarcerated individuals are far from the front of the line for the COVID-19 vaccine, despite being hard-hit. Texas and four other states comprise the highest number of coronavirus cases in prisons, they write, yet none of those states' plans to the CDC in October included prioritizing incarcerated people.

  • Excited Delirium: The controversial syndrome that can be used to protect police from misconduct charges

    Excited Delirium: The controversial syndrome that can be used to protect police from misconduct charges

    Published on December 13, 2020

    60 Minutes' John Dickerson reported on "excited delirium," which was cited in the deaths of George Floyd and Elijah McClain, and how law enforcement have used it in justifying injecting individuals with ketamine.