PRISON FELLOWSHIP BLOG

  • Uncategorized
Nevada’s mental health courts are in serious jeopardy

You can tell Clark County’s mental health court sessions on Thursday afternoons are informal because the judge stands behind a lectern in street clothes, and there isn’t a phalanx of high-priced attorneys to be found.

But dealing with adult criminal offenders who suffer from bipolar disorders or schizophrenia is still serious business.

By Steve Kanigher
May 1, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Osama Bin Laden Killed; ‘Justice Has Been Done’

Osama bin Laden, the long-hunted al-Qaeda leader and chief architect of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States, was killed by U.S. forces Sunday in what officials described as a surgical raid on his luxury hideout in Pakistan.

By Philip Rucker, Scott Wilson and Anne E. Kornblut
May 1, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Co-Victims Against the Death Penalty

As the country has increasingly turned against capital punishment as barbaric and horrifyingly prone to legal abuses, defenders are pointing to the emotional needs of the families of murder victims — “co-victims” to those who study crime — as justification. Many family members, however, have said they want no part of that.

By Editorial
April 30, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Jerry Brown cancels plan for $356-million death row

Gov. Jerry Brown on Thursday canceled construction of a $356-million death row at San Quentin prison, saying it would be “unconscionable” to spend so much on condemned inmates as the state is slashing budgets for education and other social services.

“At a time when children, the disabled and seniors face painful cuts to essential programs, the state of California cannot justify a massive expenditure of public dollars for the worst criminals,” Brown said in a statement.

By Jack Dolan and Carol J. Williams
April 29, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Internet Lets a Criminal Past Catch Up Quicker

Convicted of robbing a video store in California in 1997, Ayanna Spikes decided to change the trajectory of her life. In 14 years, she has had no further brushes with the law.

The eight months she spent in prison, she said, were “the best thing that ever happened to me,” persuading her to pursue training in medical administration and complete coursework for a degree in psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.

By Erica Goode
April 29, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Former U.S. Probation Officer Pleads Guilty to Civil Rights and Sex Abuse Charges

 

Mark John Walker, 52, of Eugene, Ore., pleaded guilty today to charges related to his engaging in sexual contact or aggravated sexual abuse with female offenders who were under his direct supervision as a federal probation officer from 2006 to 2009. 

By Civil Rights Division
April 28, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Recidivism’s High Cost and a Way to Cut It

Corrections costs for the states have quadrupled in the last 20 years — to about $52 billion a year nationally — making prison spending their second-fastest growing budget item after Medicaid. To cut those costs, the states must first rethink parole and probation policies that drive hundreds of thousands of people back to prison every year, not for new crimes, but for technical violations that present no threat to public safety.

By Editorial
April 28, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
So What?

This weekend was eye-opening and inspiring for me. But as I talked with Deborah Daniels, Alabama volunteers, and Angel Tree founder Mary Kay Beard, I was especially encouraged to learn that Prison Fellowship’s ministry in Alabama continues all year.

 

As I leave Alabama, I am grateful to all of you who have taken time out of your Easter weekend to follow along with Chuck and the Prison Fellowship crew on our special trip. 

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 25, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Free Indeed

 

Every time I get the privilege of interacting closely with inmates (which the Gospel of Matthew says is tantamount to drawing close to Jesus), I try to imagine what their daily lives must be like. Airport security procedures–like the ones that led me to lose control over my person and my property for just five minutes today–must give a brief glimpse.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 25, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
“I Can See Over the Fence!”

 

Robert, an inmate at Bibb County Correctional Facility near Brent, Alabama, has spent most of his life behinds bars. A drug-user by age 8 and a junkie by 14, he committed murder when he should have been learning how to drive.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 24, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
The Lord Done Brought Me a Mighty Long Way

William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility, separated from the outside world by yards of razor wire and fencing, houses over 1,500 inmates, one third of whom are serving life sentences without the possibility of parole. Donaldson is named for a correctional officer who was murdered on the job there two decades ago.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 23, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
A Visit to Death Row

Holy Saturday is a somber day, as Christians continue to reflect on the death of Christ and prepare eagerly for His resurrection. It is fitting that today, Chuck Colson will visit death row as part of an Easter weekend trip to William E.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 23, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Back to the Beginning

 

It’s 11 o’clock at night in central Alabama, and Prison Fellowship staff have just returned to the hotel after an invigorating day of interaction with inmates, the PF donors who make our ministry possible, and the PF volunteers who carry it out.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 22, 2011
  • Uncategorized
Juvenile Killers in Jail for Life Seek a Reprieve

More than a decade ago, a 14-year-old boy killed his stepbrother in a scuffle that escalated from goofing around with a blowgun to an angry threat with a bow and arrow to the fatal thrust of a hunting knife.

The boy, Quantel Lotts, had spent part of the morning playing with Pokémon cards.

By Adam Liptak
April 21, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Return to Alabama

This Easter weekend, Chuck Colson and friends will travel to three Alabama prisons—including Maxwell—to share the Gospel in the place where the ministry of Prison Fellowship originated.

You’re invited to come along with us. As Chuck and Prison Fellowship volunteers lead special Easter services in Alabama prisons, we’ll be reporting live from the road.

By Alyson R. Quinn
April 20, 2011
  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 131
  • 132
  • 133
  • 134
  • 135
  • …
  • 144
  • Next Page »

SELECT A TOPIC

  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Angel Tree
  • Families of Prisoners
  • Feature Stories
  • From the CEO
  • Hope Events
  • Inside Journal
  • Press Releases
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship Academy
  • Prison Fellowship International
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Reentry
  • Second Chance Month
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • Warden Exchange

MOST POPULAR

Prison Fellowship Leads Nationwide Day of Action Urging Congress To Pass Second Chance Month Resolution

April 14, 2026

Prison Fellowship Honors Pat Nolan with 2026 Charles Colson Advocate of Hope Award at Ceremony in Washington, DC.

April 10, 2026

A Grandmother’s Gratitude: Sharon’s Story

April 8, 2026

PRISON FELLOWSHIP IN THE NEWS

View our latest press releases and hear what other publications are saying about Prison Fellowship and our programs.

    Why Second Chances Matter
    Why Christians Must Reject the Throw Away the Key Mindset
    Oklahoma Woman Pushes for Second Chances After Prison
    Miller, Colleagues Celebrate Bipartisan Resolution Declaring April as Second Chance Month
VIEW MORE NEWS

LATEST VIDEOS

Watch all videos