An analysis of federal data conducted by The Marshall Project and NPR indicates that grievances filed by incarcerated individuals regarding their treatment, including issues of abuse and denied medical care, often do not result in any action. The findings suggest that the grievance process in federal prisons is largely ineffective.
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Signals flagged in the original
- loaded language: 'stonewall'
- loaded language: 'deny care'
- framing: 'Rejected': How federal prisons stonewall grievances and deny care for years
- editorializing: those efforts go nowhere
- omitted response: a named/criticized party is given no chance to respond
Analyzed by our bias model Full breakdown ↓
Analysis Reveals Ineffectiveness of Grievance Process in Federal Prisons
A recent analysis by The Marshall Project and NPR highlights the ineffectiveness of the grievance process for incarcerated individuals in federal prisons. Many grievances related to treatment issues, including medical care, reportedly go unresolved.
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Bias Analysis
Bias Indicators Removed
- ✕ loaded language: 'stonewall'
- ✕ loaded language: 'deny care'
- ✕ framing: 'Rejected': How federal prisons stonewall grievances and deny care for years
- ✕ editorializing: those efforts go nowhere
- ✕ omitted response: a named/criticized party is given no chance to respond
Original vs. Neutral
'Rejected': How federal prisons stonewall grievances and deny care for years
Analysis Reveals Ineffectiveness of Grievance Process in Federal Prisons