The Marshall Project recently earned awards and recognition from three leading industry organizations: the Institute for Nonprofit News, the Online News Association, and NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists. These honors highlight the organization’s editorial excellence, innovative multimedia and digital work, and its continued commitment to shining a light on the U.S. justice system.

“We’re deeply honored to receive these awards, which reflect the breadth, depth and talent of our extraordinary staff,” said Geraldine Sealey, acting Editor-in-Chief of The Marshall Project. “We’re grateful to the judges, as well as to our media partners and collaborators.”

The awards include:

Institute for Nonprofit News (INN)

Insight Award for Explanatory Journalism 2025 Nonprofit News Award

  • Large Newsroom Category for “The Hardest Case for Mercy by Joe Sexton. The reporting focused on the work of people who make the case for mercy in death penalty cases — in this case, the defense team of Nikolas Cruz, who fatally shot 17 people and wounded 17 others at a high school in Parkland, Florida, in 2018.
  • 2025 Journalism Collaboration of the Year for “Unsolved,” a joint investigation by The Marshall Project, St. Louis Public Radio and APM Reports exploring why St. Louis has more than 1,000 unsolved homicides, the impact on families and the complexities that police face.

Online News Association (ONA):

NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists:

  • Excellence in Multimedia Award in NLGJA’s Excellence in Journalism Awards for 2025 for “What Being Trans in Prison Is Really Like.” The project’s team included Beth Schwartzapfel, Bo-Won Keum, Aithne Feay, Katie Park, Chris Cortez, Akiba Solomon, Tom Meagher and Ashley Dye.

These recognitions underscore The Marshall Project’s continued leadership in criminal justice journalism. Founded in 2014, the nonprofit newsroom has won two Pulitzer Prizes, been named a Peabody finalist, and published thousands of stories in partnership with local and national media outlets across the country.

The Marshall Project’s journalism is made possible primarily through philanthropic support. If you’d like to help sustain this work, you can contribute here: Support The Marshall Project.