Hundreds of jails across the country have done away with in-person visits, instead offering video calls that experts say are expensive and deprive families of human contact. Two lawsuits in Michigan seek to reverse the practice. NBC News’ Lester Holt reports.
Related Posts
Surge of Chinese migrants crossing Southern border into the U.S.
The number of migrants from China has soared from under 1,000 a few years ago to more than 37,000 last year. NBC News’ David Noriega […]
Watch highlights from the 77th Tony Awards
The 77 Annual Tony Awards hosted by Ariana DeBose returned to its usual scripted format. The evening was filled with exciting performances with musicals “Merrily […]

She wants to start a College Republicans chapter at an HBCU — but can’t find an adviser
Charrise Lane wants to re-establish what would be the only active chapter of College Republicans at a historically Black college or university at Florida A&M […]