Fatal Errors, Part 3: Police Reformer — or Cover-Up Artist?
Conclusion of a three-part series on deaths at the hands of police in Tucson, AZ, and Richmond, CA.
Conclusion of a three-part series on deaths at the hands of police in Tucson, AZ, and Richmond, CA.
In this week’s Scrutineers, Emily Levy talks to one county recorder who has transformed his community from opaque to transparent in terms of voting knowledge.
Kentucky State Police Training Included Hitler’s Guidance ; Venice’s Controversial Inflatable Floodgates Save the City ; and More Picks 11/10
Police Unions Are Losing the War on Criminal Justice Reform ; Gym Trainer Exposed 50 to COVID-19, but No One Got Sick Because of Ventilation ; and More Picks 11/20
How dumb can a congressperson be? This story on investigative journalism during the 1970s can only begin to answer that question. (You didn’t think we were referring to anyone in Congress today, did you?)
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis continues to target fired coronavirus data scientist.
Domestic Terrorism: A More Urgent Threat, but Weaker Laws ; 2021 Will Be the Year of Guaranteed Income Experiments ; and More Picks 1/12
Steve McCurry pursues not the objective reality that a journalist seeks to record, but rather the beauty that captures the attention and narrative imagination of the artist.
DHS Confirms Neo-Nazi Used to Work For It ; The Digital Divide Is Giving American Churches Hell ; and More Picks 2/18
Nuclear tech startups promise a climate change solution in exchange for heavy government subsidies. Whether they’ll deliver in time is a gamble some are not willing to take.
Republican members of the 117th Congress have begun introducing legislation as a means of reinvigorating the conversation around alleged voter fraud, while Democrats are seeking to expand voting rights and access.
A parting shot by Donald Trump is about to destroy the San Carlos Apaches’ equivalent of Mount Sinai, revered for millennia by earlier tribes.