Memorably described as "living hell" by Johnny Cash, San Quentin has long been one of the USA's most infamous prisons.
The popular and critically-acclaimed podcast was previously a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, journalism's highest honor.
On the day before Thanksgiving, California Gov. Gavin Newsom pardoned 19 people, including Walter Earlonne Woods, who was ...
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) pardoned a Pulitzer Prize finalist who spent more than two decades imprisoned at San Quentin ...
California Governor Gavin Newsom has granted a full and unconditional pardon to Earlonne Woods, co-founder and co-host of the ...
California Gov. Gavin Newsom granted 19 Thanksgiving eve pardons, including one to a Pulitzer Prize finalist who produced the ...
The prison (now officially known as San Quentin Rehabilitation Center rather than San Quentin State Prison), already had programs to support reentry, though resources were limited. Classes that ...
Earlonne Woods co-founded the popular podcast from inside San Quentin State Prison in 2017 while serving a lengthy prison sentence. Newsom had begun the process of pardoning him earlier this year.
Gavin Newsom (D) pardoned a Pulitzer Prize finalist who spent more than two decades imprisoned at San Quentin ... The state’s former Gov. Jerry Brown, commuted Woods’ prison sentence in ...
A white supremacist prison gang leader is accused in the attempted homicide of two officers at the California State Prison in ...