
Liliana Segura
Journalist at The Intercept
Journalist focused on prisons & harsh sentencing. More fun than I sound.
Articles
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3 days ago |
intercept.com.br | Liliana Segura |Deborah Leão
Após anunciar, no começo do mês, a intenção do governo Trump de pedir pena de morte para Luigi Mangione, a procuradora-geral dos EUA, Pam Bondi, deu uma entrevista à Fox News.
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6 days ago |
flipboard.com | Liliana Segura
3 hours agoA migrant has died trying to cross the English Channel in a small boat as more than 50 others were brought to shore. Some 51 survivors were taken aboard a Border Force vessel and disembarked at Dover harbour on Good Friday morning. A coastguard team carried the body into a blue forensics tent on a …
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6 days ago |
theintercept.com | Liliana Segura
Two months before she was supposed to go on trial for killing her child, Michelle Taylor stood before a Florida judge and listened quietly as the prosecutor recited the allegations against her. Taylor, 41, had long insisted she was not what the state made her out to be: a mother who set fire to her home to collect insurance money, killing her 11-year-old son David in the process. Now there was proof she’d been telling the truth.
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1 week ago |
theintercept.com | Liliana Segura
A few days after she announced that the Trump administration will seek the death penalty against alleged UnitedHealthcare CEO assassin Luigi Mangione, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi sat down for an interview with Fox News Sunday, where she was asked to respond to fears that the country is in a constitutional crisis. Her answer was predictable. The real constitutional crisis, Bondi said, is the barrage of legal challenges to Trump’s agenda.
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3 weeks ago |
theintercept.com | Liliana Segura
Megan Wallace had just been booked at the St. Johns County Jail in St. Augustine, Florida, when she started hearing gossip about its most notorious resident. Michelle Taylor, then 34, had allegedly set fire to her own house in 2018, killing her 11-year-old son. The motive was insurance money. Everyone at the jail seemed disgusted by her. “The guards treated her like shit,” Wallace said. A mother herself, Wallace vowed to stay away from Taylor.
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RT @theintercept: Florida prosecutors say Michelle Taylor used gasoline to set a fire that killed her son. Top forensic chemists say they’r…

RT @MaryamSaleh: Often, problematic prosecutions come to light only after a person has already been convicted, when it's much harder to rig…

New from me @theintercept: A FL woman faces life in prison for killing her son in a fire. But the fire marshal's lab has a history of misidentifying gasoline in fire debris & experts say that's what happened here. A new twist on an all-too familiar story. https://t.co/o6lalDrnGx

“The lab report that says they found gasoline is bullshit. Every part of the state’s case rests on that.” https://t.co/rtmOjyHrIt