A Heist on Time and a Half: Inside the Most Corrupt Squad in the Nation
“If you could put your own crew together and rob the biggest drug dealer you know, who would that drug dealer be?”
“If you could put your own crew together and rob the biggest drug dealer you know, who would that drug dealer be?”
Baynard Woods, Brandon Soderberg Crimereads Jul 2020 25min Permalink
Everything I had going against me he had going for him. Us young Black dudes who were slanging were hated, hunted and haunted for our role in the drug war. He was praised and honored and rewarded with overtime.
D. Watkins Huffington Post Highline May 2020 40min Permalink
Ignoring warning signs of misconduct, Baltimore Police praised — and promoted — a Gun Trace Task Force leader.
Justin Fenton The Baltimore Sun Jun 2019 25min Permalink
How order collapsed in an American city.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Mar 2019 30min Permalink
In America’s deadliest big city, the task of announcing each new murder falls to police spokesman T. J. Smith. One year ago, he confronted a killing like no other.
Luke Mullins The Atlantic Jul 2018 30min Permalink
Inside one of America’s most corrupt police squads.
Jessica Lussenhop BBC Apr 2018 35min Permalink
“GOD Almighty, you can get killed in Baltimore—for no reason at all.”
Barry Michael Cooper Spin May 1986 Permalink
Davon Mayer was a smalltime dealer in west Baltimore who made an illicit deal with local police. Then they turned on him.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee The Guardian Oct 2017 25min Permalink
A new breed of real estate investor is destroying America’s cities.
Rachel Monroe The New Republic Sep 2017 10min Permalink
Baltimore’s state’s attorney gambled that prosecuting six officers for the death of Freddie Gray would help heal her city. She lost much more than just the case.
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Sep 2016 30min Permalink
A wandering food writer goes home.
Bill Addison Eater Sep 2016 15min Permalink
Uncovering Baltimore’s secret aerial surveillance program.
Monte Reel Businessweek Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Behind the character Ursula in The Little Mermaid was a legendary drag queen from Baltimore named Divine.
Nicole Pasulka, Brian Ferree Hazlitt Jan 2016 15min Permalink
How an entire industry built itself convincing lead-paint poisoning victims to sign over settlement payments for a fraction of what they’re worth.
Terrence McCoy Washington Post Aug 2015 20min Permalink
A journalist’s memories of covering the great Baltimore fire of 1904.
H.L. Mencken Newspaper Days Jan 1941 30min Permalink
An account of Chinese residents in a future, dystopian city once known as Baltimore; excerpted from Lee's latest novel.
"Maybe Charters can easily forget what it's like out there, but we B-Mors and others in similar settlements should be aware of the possibilities. We shouldn't take for granted the security and comfort of our neighborhoods, we shouldn't think that always leaving our windows open and our doors unlocked means that we're beyond an encroachment. We may believe our gates are insurmountable and that we're armored by routines, but can't we be touched by chance or fate, plucked up like a mouse foraging along his well-worn trail? Before you know it, you're looking down at the last faint print of your claws in the dirt."
Chang-rae Lee NPR Books Dec 2013 15min Permalink
Learning of a plot against the life of the newly elected Lincoln, Alan Pinkerton decamps to Baltimore and infiltrates the conspiracy.
Daniel Stashower Smithsonian Jan 2013 Permalink
Is Bryan Saunders a drug-inspired outsider genius, or just in need of intervention?
Jon Ronson The Guardian Nov 2012 10min Permalink
Karen Holloman opened the door of her uncle's apartment with his best friend, Larry Young, a step behind. As they edged inside, she looked to her left and saw the end of her uncle's bed and his motionless feet. "He's been in here asleep all along," Holloman muttered, for a moment annoyed at the worry he had caused by not answering his phone. Her anger froze as she entered his room: The Rev. Marvin Moore lay dead in his bed, a bullet hole through the back of his head, a pool of blood gathered beneath his limp arm.
David Simon, Doug Struck Washington Post Nov 1997 10min Permalink
On the rise of witness intimidation in Baltimore.
Jeremy Kahn The Atlantic Apr 2007 30min Permalink
The first entry in the City by City project, on a Baltimore funeral:
My homeboy is interred at a cemetery with a swan lake where we used to take our girls at night because it was a park with a lake and it was just over the line and in the county.
Lawrence Jackson n+1 May 2011 15min Permalink
An interview with David Simon, creator of The Wire.
Bill Moyers Guernica Apr 2011 25min Permalink
An 18-month investigation proves reveals how easy it is to get away with murder in Baltimore.
Jim Haner, John B. O'Donnell, Kimberly A.C. Wilson The Baltimore Sun Sep 2002 35min Permalink
When the Feds sought the death penalty for four African-American drug dealers in Baltimore, the accused found a defense in the unlikeliest of places: the legal theories of white supremacists.
Kevin Carey Washington Monthly May 2008 25min Permalink