New Yorker
— Ryu Spaeth, features editor, New York
| What does it take for an innocent person to get out of prison? In the case of Kelly Harnett, something like a village. In this telling of her extraordinary journey to freedom, the journalist Justine van der Leun shows how Harnett, wrongfully convicted of a murder her boyfriend committed, taught herself the law on the notorious Rikers Island and proceeded to become what is known as a jailhouse lawyer, filing motions and appeals not only for herself but for other women prisoners. Harnett discovered that many of these incarcerated women were, like her, victims of abuse and that, like her, they would not have been in prison in the first place if they hadn’t been abused. With a little help from an unlikely roster of characters in the New York criminal-justice system — a sympathetic prosecutor, an admiring judge, Andrew Cuomo — Harnett won her release, opening the door for other abuse victims to do the same. |
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| Photo: Brenda Ann Kenneally |
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| “We can do without the mystery and just talk about the crazy things that happened. All’s well that ends well.” Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant tells Vulture’s Devon Ivie about the finest and most questionable moments of his career. |
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| Intelligencer’s Eric Levitz argues that Kyrsten Sinema’s superficial rebranding as an Independent does not make Congress more representative of the country. |
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| From Shania Twain to Cardi B to (possibly) Frank Ocean, Cat Cardenas rounds up all the upcoming albums worth getting excited about in 2023. |
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