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The average cost of incarcerating each prisoner in the MA DOC in FY2025 increased to $141,062. The DOC budget rose to $842,985,683. The population as of January 1st, 2025 was 5,976.

In 2025, 33% of MA prisoners are aged 50 or older.  Drivers of aging are laws requiring mandatory Life Without Parole (LWOP) sentences for first-degree murder, plus for felony murder or joint venture cases if a death occurs during the event, whether or not the offender killed or intended to kill …

  • Edward Wright has been freed from prison. The New England Innocence Project announced that on July 31, 2025, its client, Edward Wright, has been freed from prison after being wrongfully incarcerated for more than 41 years for a Springfield murder he did not commit. This decision was based on findings of police and prosecutorial misconduct; however Edward Wright’s fight for exonoration is not yet over, as the Commonwealth may still decide to retry the case.

Western Mass News Coverage
  • Joint Committee on the Judiciary, Hearing #6: Sex Offenses and Domestic Violence, Chaired by Chairwoman Edwards, Hearing Details, June 17, 2025. Cynthia Goldberg, Community Organizer for CELWOP, testified at this hearing.

  • Joint Committee on the Judiciary, Criminal and Court Procedure Hearing Details, June 3, 2025. Testimony was heard on an Act to end Mass Incarceration H2052 S1178. See, for example: testimony from Prisoners’ Legal Services, League of Women Voters of MA, and Lois Ahrens, Director of the Real Cost of Prisons Project. (Note that Massachusetts has the highest percentage of people serving life without the possibility of parole in the United States.)

Press conference announcement by New England Innocence Project for April 17 at 10:30 a.m. at U.S. District Court in Boston, discussing Edward Wright's overturned conviction.
  • Fighting for the Rights of Incarcerated People, March 18-19, 2025. Emerson Prison Initiative (EPI) Conference on College in Prison, at Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, featuring panelists Lizz Matos, Calvin Arey, and Michael Millemann.

WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS

A Boston man spent decades behind bars for a murder he didn't commit; now he's helping others. WBZ/CBS Boston, February 27, 2025.

After having served almost 41 years of life without parole, all charges were dismissed against James Watson in 2020. Three years earlier, after serving 38 years, Watson’s co-defendant Frederick Clay was exonerated as well.

Black book cover titled "A Second Chance" featuring a pair of hands in handcuffs and the name Judge Frederic Block.