Dylan Hinchberger, 31, began using illicit substances at 11 years old. He said for the longest time, he wasn’t able to admit ...
When Donte Small was locked up for six and a half years on an assault charge a few months after he graduated high school, he thought his education had come to an end. But by the time he was released ...
Thanks to a partnership between Southeast Community College and the Nebraska Department of Corrections, more people will be ...
Former Wayne Correctional Center in Goldsboro, Kerwin Pittman says he’s the first formerly incarcerated person in the U.S. to buy a prison.
Roughly one in four inmates in Virginia are waiting to enroll in prison education programs — a backlog that state officials say could hinder rehabilitation and reduce chances of success after release.
Inmates are getting the chance to learn a trade to help them find a job when they get out.
Four inmates at the Charles B. Webster detention center were able to graduate through the In2work program.