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The current state of our criminal justice system represents one of America’s most glaring human rights issues. Many parts of it have grown lazy, corrupt and inefficient. Thankfully, real change is possible. The Marshall Project has proven time and again that our journalism can change laws, inform new policies, and improve the lives of real people. Please join us before the end of the year. Your gift will help hold those in power accountable and drive real change — right as the criminal justice system needs it most.

An illustration depicts two correctional officers dressed in gray shirts and black pants standing in front of a beige wall with barred windows high above them. At a distance in shadows lies the body of an incarcerated person wearing an orange prison jumpsuit crumpled on the floor.
Investigate This!

Journalists: How to Report on Deaths in Jails and Prisons

When you get a tip about a death or multiple deaths in your local jail or prison, there are concrete steps you can take to start investigating.

Read this first

Deaths that occur either when a person is in the custody of law enforcement or housed in a correctional facility are largely underreported. That’s because reporting requirements are not enforced federally or in most states. Without accurate data, circumstances leading to unnatural deaths can continue unchecked, including instances of medical negligence and excessive use-of-force. Many researchers, lawmakers and advocates view this issue as a public health emergency.

The Marshall Project has a team of reporters who have covered deaths in custody, including staff writers Brittany Hailer and Mark Puente on our Cleveland news team and our senior data reporter Anna Flagg. Their expertise has informed this reporting toolkit. Here is guidance and context based on their years of experience shedding light on this dark corner of our criminal justice system.

Along with using these tips, you can schedule a consultation to discuss specific reporting hurdles in your jurisdiction or get general advice on navigating the criminal justice beat. Expect that an investigation of this nature could take you or your newsroom months rather than weeks.

Specific records you can request

When a person dies in custody, getting records isn’t always easy. But there are many documents you can request from agencies inside and outside of the system. Below is a list of the various “receipts” that can help you verify the rough series of events that ultimately led to a death behind bars.

What to do if you don’t have the name of the deceased

First: Without a name you can still reach out to the county medical examiner, forensic pathologist or coroner to explain what you are trying to find.

Next: Share any details you have, such as the age of the deceased or the date and location of their death.

Finally: Ask for any death records that match those circumstances. In most states, their name, death date, age at time of death, cause of death and manner of death should be public information.

Get the autopsy and more from your medical examiner or coroner

First: Check this database maintained by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press to see if autopsy or coroners’ reports are available in your state.

Next: Request the autopsy or coroner’s report from the state or county medical examiner’s office, if an autopsy was performed.

Always: Ask for supplemental notes to the autopsy beyond the toxicology report, which may be called coroner’s notes, medical examiner’s notes, or investigator’s notes. These notes are really where you’re going to get the information that’s most pertinent to your investigation.

Note: The explanation of the circumstances surrounding the death is important, but the level of detail will vary from report to report based on the reviewing pathologist. Some autopsies don’t even tell you that the person was in jail when they died, while other autopsies are incredibly detailed and walk you through the whole series of events. With more thorough accounts, you may learn details such as if the person was released back to jail from the hospital or if they later died at the hospital.

Finally: Ask for supplementary documents, photos, and video, but even if the reports are considered open records, these items may not be available, especially if the autopsy is being used by law enforcement for an ongoing investigation.

Collect their booking records from the local jail

First: Once you have a name, you can go to your local jail, sheriff or county spokesperson and request a host of records. You can ask for the following documents:

Note: Some state laws mandate that surveillance and body cam footage are all public record. If you know when someone was booked, but you don’t know when they died, you can ask for footage of their booking to help paint a picture of how well or unwell the person was as they entered the facility. Keep in mind that a lot of states don’t offer access to this footage and some states make it expensive to acquire.

Get the arrest report from your local police department

First: Request the arrest record for the deceased person from the police department, sheriff’s office, clerk of courts or magistrate. This will help you determine if they were harmed or injured before they entered the jail and where they were before they entered the jail. For example, someone could suffer an injury due to excessive use-of-force during their arrest and then die in jail soon after from a ruptured spleen.

Note: Details about the location and circumstance of the arrest can help inform what their physical and mental state would have been upon entering the jail. For example, you may want to know if someone was previously in the hospital for a medical emergency before being arrested.

Records from inside the jail

First: Several records are produced after someone is booked into jail. You can request:

Always: Ask for the jail’s policies and procedures for when a death occurs in your local jail. When there’s a death in jail, standard operating procedures vary by facility. You may want to ask:

Working with the family will open more doors

If you are in touch with cooperative family members, they can request medical records for their loved one, although many jails will deny those requests.

First: Ask the family to request Emergency Medical Service (EMS) records if the person died at a hospital. They can also ask the hospital for records.

Note: The EMTs who respond to deaths at the jail ask questions and take notes so they can update the doctor. Their notes can give a narrative sense of what happened from the time the EMT entered the jail and removed the body, though there will be a gap in information regarding what happened between the emergency and the death.

Does your jail have an oversight entity?

It’s important to learn how your jail works. Who oversees the jail? Does your state have an oversight agency for the jail? What kinds of records do they keep? What kinds of investigations do they manage?

First: Check this graphic from the National Resource Center for Correctional Oversight to see if your state has external oversight agencies for their prisons. The oversight of jails and prisons is not uniform nationwide, and while internal oversight agencies are common, many states don’t yet have external oversight by parties outside of their correctional agency.

Next: If your state has an oversight agency, you can request all critical incidents for your county in a given year. States have different names for these records. For example, Ohio uses the term “critical incidents” while Pennsylvania uses the term “extraordinary occurrence reports.” You should get a dataset tracking events like suicides, fires, assaults and deaths. The state may be faster at providing records than the county, and state documents can help you fact-check what the county is telling you.

Note: If you identify interesting data points, you can ask for supporting documents to help clarify what the investigation entailed, any conclusions that were drawn, if there was a corrective action plan and other details.

Finally: We imagine there are many terms across different states for these types of incident reports. If your state uses a different term, please let us know.

Common obstacles you may encounter

Most often, denials for records requests will reference HIPAA or the documents will be so redacted that they are essentially useless. Small errors, such as incorrect dates or misspellings, can slow things down or be grounds for denial. So, triple-check your request before submitting.

Note: Consider broadening your records request to make it unclear exactly what incident or issue you’re looking into. For example, if you know there was one death in January 2024, you could ask for records related to all deaths from January 2021 through January 2025. Keep in mind, however, that if your request is too broad, an agency can deny it for being overly burdensome.

Always: Remember that public officials can say whatever they want and it’s critical to:

For more information about common roadblocks, check out this behind-the-scenes look at a Marshall Project investigation of the Cuyahoga County Jail from staff writers Brittany Hailer and Mark Puente.

Request your state’s Death in Custody Reporting Act data annually

First: Every state has a reporting agency for the Death in Custody Reporting Act, or DCRA. These agencies are required to send quarterly reports to the federal government in order to adhere to DCRA. You can find your state’s agency here.

Always: Request information from your state’s reporting agency at the start of the new year. You can request those reports for the previous year, which provide a sense of how many people died in custody in the state during that time frame.

Note: The report won’t provide an accurate number since many sheriffs and wardens don’t report every death in their facility; however, the reports can at least make you aware of deaths that your local jail did not report to the press.

What to know about DCRA

When investigating deaths in local jails and prisons, you will encounter the Death in Custody Reporting Act (DCRA). Enacted in 2000, the DCRA mandates that the federal government collect data from local jurisdictions on deaths in prisons and jails. This includes arrest-related deaths such as police shootings and use-of-force incidents, as well as other deaths that occur during arrest.

It’s important to know that the Department of Justice is legally obligated to collect this information. If a local jurisdiction claims they are not required to report deaths in their jail or prison, that statement is false; however, because the Department of Justice cannot compel agencies to report data or report it correctly, this data still may not be available or may not be accurate.

To learn more about DCRA download our tipsheet.

The Alabama Solution: Spotlight on prison death data

The humanitarian crisis in Alabama’s prisons is the focus of a new documentary, “The Alabama Solution” from co-directors Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman. The team chronicled the deteriorating conditions behind bars since the U.S. Justice Department found widespread violence, neglect and sexual abuse in the state’s prison system in 2020. Deaths have more than doubled since 2019, and fatal drug overdoses have increased more than tenfold, the filmmakers found. The documentary offers a rare look into these institutions, which are notoriously closed off to the public, by featuring cellphone footage shot by a group of incarcerated men.

Learn more about the documentary, which is streaming on HBO Max, by reading our list of 5 takeaways and this edition of our Closing Argument newsletter.

To understand the magnitude of the crisis, the filmmaking team worked to piece together public records from several sources and create a searchable database of the nearly 1,400 deaths of incarcerated people in Alabama between 2019 and 2024. The database includes the cause and manner of death, along with demographic data about the person who died. Where available, the filmmakers also cross-referenced autopsy reports and other relevant information from sources, such as incarcerated people, their family members, prison officers and other corrections staff members.

A screenshot shows a web page titled "Deaths in Alabama prisons, a database of deaths between 2019 and 2024." The web page features the total number of deaths, pictures of the men who died and search categories.
Here is a screenshot of the database of Alabama prison deaths created by “The Alabama Solution” team. The Marshall Project generally avoids publishing mugshots due to the stigma attached to them; however, the filmmakers explain in their methodology that the mugshots “also provide something that simple data and information cannot — a rendering of the humanity lost to this crisis.”

The database is meant to be a jumping-off point for journalists, family members and other interested stakeholders across Alabama who want to shed light on the deadly trends within correctional facilities. It can be filtered by categories like cause of death, institution, year of death, race and prison to help reveal trends within this crisis. It’s also a helpful example for reporters in other states of how to get creative with records requests to identify how many deaths occurred in their state’s prisons.

Reporters and independent content creators covering this issue are welcome to use any of the images in this folder for your related coverage, courtesy of the filmmakers. Make sure to use the captions and crediting language provided in the folder. It is not permitted to feed these images to AI image generators or otherwise manipulate these images, with the exception of minimal cropping.

If you are interested in exposing the scope of this public health crisis in your state and want to discuss your reporting with a Marshall Project staff member, you can request a consultation here.

As you dig into the data for Alabama, here are key reporting tips from the filmmakers:

Dig for information beyond official sources

In order to get a more complete count of deaths behind bars, the documentary crew had to cast a wide net, collecting data from several sources. Along with requesting records from the Alabama Department of Corrections for the facility, date, and name of each in-custody death, they filled in gaps regarding the cause and manner of death by reviewing reports from various agencies, including the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs and the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, among others. Cross-referencing data sources also helped verify conflicting information. Read more about their methodology here.

Review “pro se” litigation

Incarcerated people can legally represent themselves and file what is known as “pro se” litigation to document civil rights issues. Pro se litigation can offer a real-time record of what was happening behind bars and a blueprint for what sources to contact, since the deceased litigant may have mentioned cellmates, friends, or corrections employees in the documentation. These lawsuits rarely result in legal action because the odds are stacked against incarcerated people, but even if their grievances are dismissed, you may still be able to obtain a record of the initial filing. In Alabama, pro se litigation is filed in federal court, so the filmmakers accessed these records through PACER. It’s also important to request the person’s institutional files, which may include incident reports about interactions with corrections officers, along with intake and health forms, and other breadcrumbs. Tracking down all this information can be overwhelming, especially for grieving family members, which is why we created this guide on what questions to ask and documents to obtain when a family member dies behind bars.

Ask for receipts

When someone dies in prison, corrections officials may release a press statement with vague or incorrect details to local media. It is important not to rely solely on details reported by the corrections department. Instead, you can use the public information as a starting point to ask follow-up questions that require prison officials to show the proof behind their assumptions, such as: How do you know that? Why do you think that? What document or record shows that? In Alabama, the public has a right to request an incarcerated person’s institutional files, autopsies and hospital records in some cases.

Remind audiences of essential context

When highlighting systemic dysfunction, let your audience know what policies contributed to the problems you're covering. State corrections systems are especially shaped by policies made by lawmakers at the state level. For example, Alabama’s Habitual Felony Offender Act, one of the harshest laws of its kind nationally, has led to hundreds of incarcerated people serving life sentences without parole.

Acknowledgements: Thanks to the crew behind “The Alabama Solution”: co-directors Charlotte Kaufman and Andrew Jarecki, co-producer Beth Shelburne, and associate producers Chris Izor and Gabe Murray for sharing their reporting tips. Jarecki is a donor to and board member of The Marshall Project.

Use this illustration

You are welcome to republish the provided illustration within any stories derived from the materials in this toolkit, along with any related social media and newsletter promotion of those stories. Juan Bernabeu must be credited in all uses. The illustration should not be published in unrelated stories. The illustrations should not be cropped or altered in any way. Please email us with any questions and learn more about the artist here.

An illustration depicts two correctional officers dressed in gray shirts and black pants standing in front of a beige wall with barred windows high above them. At a distance in shadows lies the body of an incarcerated person wearing an orange prison jumpsuit crumpled on the floor.

Watch our webinar

On March 12, 2025, The Marshall Project hosted a press briefing on deaths behind bars. The event brought together several national experts to discuss insights from their data collection and academic research on this issue, which is a public health emergency. This conversation is on-the-record, and we encourage local journalists to use quotes and sound bites for their reporting on this topic, which is why we're providing the full transcript here.

Watch the recorded webinar.

Our panelists included: Andrea Armstrong, Dr. Norman C. Francis Distinguished Professor of Law, Loyola University New Orleans; Terence Keel, Professor of Human Biology and Society, University of California Los Angeles; and Orion Taylor, Lead Data Scientist at the Public Safety Lab (NYU & Social Science Research Council).

Marshall Project Staff Writer Brittany Hailer and Senior Data Reporter Anna Flagg moderated the event. Here is a list of the links to resources we shared in the chat during the event.

Get advice from our reporters

There are a few more strategies you may want to deploy. To learn more, schedule a consultation through this form so we can diagnose your situation and offer tailored guidance on ways to proceed.

Expert sources

The following experts have provided critical insights for news coverage on deaths in custody and facility oversight. We’ve indicated their areas of expertise below.

Style and standards

Here are two thorny issues that could come up during the reporting process and guidance on how to resolve them. For a more general overview of our styles and standards, please review our resources page.

Medical histories

When a source’s medical history is relevant to the story, you’ll need to confirm or verify any information included in the story. For stories that include important medical details about a deceased person that you obtained from a family member, make sure the family member is authorized to speak on their loved one’s behalf. You will still need to verify their information with a secondary source.

People-first language

You’ll notice throughout this toolkit that the words “inmates,” “prisoners,” “convicts” and “felons” are not used to describe the people who have died while in custody.

Instead, we use “people-first” language — such as “incarcerated people,” “people behind bars,” “people convicted of felonies” or “formerly incarcerated people.” These words avoid stigmatizing euphemisms and emphasize accuracy and clarity.

We make an exception for “prisoner” or “prisoners” in headlines, for brevity’s sake, and because it’s less fraught with stigma.

Share your work

Thank you for using this toolkit to create your own local criminal justice reporting! Please help us track your work and potentially share it in our newsletter by emailing us a link to your reporting.

Credits

REPORTING
Brittany Hailer, Anna Flagg

ADDITIONAL REPORTING
Mark Puente

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Michelle Billman

EDITORIAL DIRECTION
Ruth Baldwin

EDITORIAL GUIDANCE
David Eads, Nicole Lewis

ILLUSTRATION
Juan Bernabeu

ART DIRECTION
Celina Fang, Marci Suela

STYLE & STANDARDS
Ghazala Irshad

PRODUCT
Elan Kiderman Ullendorff, Ana Graciela Méndez

AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT
Ashley Dye, Rachel Kincaid

COPY EDITING
Lauren Hardie

OUTREACH
Terri Troncale, Will Lager

Tags: Dying Behind Bars Toolkit Prison Death Deaths in Custody Jail Deaths