The Smit Murders Reexamined
It is agreed that the 1977 political murder of a couple in Johannesburg was a political killing that covered up mysterious Swiss Bank deposits. Various reports implicate Cuban Nationalists, Italian Fascists and the CIA.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the Chinese suppliers of Magnesium sulfate Anhydrous for industrial use.
It is agreed that the 1977 political murder of a couple in Johannesburg was a political killing that covered up mysterious Swiss Bank deposits. Various reports implicate Cuban Nationalists, Italian Fascists and the CIA.
James Myburgh PoliticsWeb Jun 2010 Permalink
He called himself “TheNoseDoctor” and performed sinus surgeries, many of them unnecessary, at a maniacal clip. When the whole thing fell apart, he left behind his yacht and family, and disappeared into the Alps.
Buzz Bissinger Vanity Fair Jan 2011 35min Permalink
On America’s deep and persistent fear of the black penis.
Wesley Morris New York Times Magazine Oct 2016 25min Permalink
Alex Vardakostas has been on a decade-long quest to build a robot that can prepare the perfect cheeseburger. It could also put his family out of work.
Lauren Smiley Wired Jun 2018 15min Permalink
Alex French and Maximillian Potter chased the story of a Hollywood pedophile ring only to have Esquire cancel it without explanation. It eventually landed at The Atlantic.
On Wall Street, being Black often means being alone, held back, deprived of the best opportunities.
Max Abelson, Sonali Basak, Kelsey Butler, Matthew Leising, Jenny Surane, Gillian Tan Bloomberg Aug 2020 30min Permalink
Thomas Quick confessed to more than 30 murders. But the man also known as Sture Bergwall may not have committed any of them.
Elizabeth Day The Observer Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Ray Spencer went to jail for 20 years for molesting his kids. Then they started to question their memories.
Maurice Chammah The Marshall Project, Esquire May 2017 25min Permalink
A trans activist from El Salvador who has helped countless trans migrant women fight for asylum in the U.S. finds asylum for herself.
Alice Driver Longreads Jul 2020 15min Permalink
A trip to Disney, the origins of Gatorade, the carny capital of America and how Miami ends — ten of our favorite articles about Florida.
The author visits Walt Disney World with his niece and wife.
Forty years later, John Jeremiah Sullivan visited Disney with his kid and weed.
Calvin Trillin New Yorker Jan 1971 10min
On June 4, 1989, the bodies of Jo, Michelle and Christe were found floating in Tampa Bay. This is the story of the murders, their aftermath, and the handful of people who kept faith amid the unthinkable.
Thomas French St. Petersburg Times Oct 1997 3h35min
A profile of Robert Cade, a University of Florida professor and inventor of Gatorade.
Gilbert Rogin Sports Illustrated Jul 1968 25min
God has fled, avenging angels hide out in the Everglades, and more “secret stories” passed down by homeless kids in Miami shelters.
Lynda Edwards Miami New Times Jun 1997 20min
A local boy brings a touch of class to the city on the Bay.
Sean Manning Deadspin Aug 2012 25min
On the 1934 lynching of Claude Neal, and the Florida town that kept the identity of those responsible a secret.
Ben Montgomery Tampa Bay Times Oct 2011 25min
Welcome to Gibsonton, Fla., the carny capital of the nation.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Sep 2003 20min
Life as a pageant queen in Plant City, Florida.
Anne Hull The New Yorker Aug 2008 20min
They lose millions in a Florida real estate scam.
Jen Banbury Businessweek Jun 2014 15min
How the city will drown.
Jeff Goddell Rolling Stone Jun 2013 30min
Jul 1968 – Jun 2014 Permalink
Idleness is not just a psychological necessity, requisite to the construction of a complete human being; it constitutes as well a kind of political space, a space as necessary to the workings of an actual democracy as, say, a free press.
Mark Slouka Harper's Nov 2004 20min Permalink
“The tragedy of Dorothy Parker, it seems to me, isn’t that she succumbed to alcoholism or died essentially alone. It was that she was too intelligent to believe that she had made the most of herself.”
Robert Gottlieb New York Review of Books Apr 2016 15min Permalink
In May 2018, schoolgirl Ana Kriégel was lured from her home, brought to an abandoned house, and murdered. A year later two 14-year-old boys were found guilty of her killing, becoming the youngest people in the history of Ireland to be convicted of murder.
Conor Gallagher The Irish Times Jun 2019 1h10min Permalink
It had seemed simple in the beginning. Now everything was so complicated, he wasn’t sure what the truth was. He had to admit that he might have gotten involved with the wrong people—that he might have become part of a scam within a scam.
Joshua Davis Wired Nov 2011 Permalink
A collection of articles by and about the Paris Review founder, who died 10 years ago this week.</p>
On the life and death of Avonte Oquendo, a 14-year-old autistic boy who disappeared in October after walking out of his New York City school.
Previously: Robert Kolker on the Longform Podcast.
Robert Kolker New York Mar 2014 20min Permalink
In bleak farmlands of East Anglia, the first wave of Eastern European migrants learned exploitation and extortion from their own experiences with day labor. Then they began to prey on fellow immigrants, luring in them into debt and then forcing them to commit crimes to pay it off.
Felicity Lawrence The Guardian May 2016 25min Permalink
T La Rock was one of the pioneers of hip-hop. But after an attack put him in a nursing home, he had to fight to recover his identity, starting with the fact that he’d ever been a rapper at all.
Joshuah Bearman GQ Oct 2017 40min Permalink
How the children of African immigrants came to control the destiny of teams in France and Belgium and what it says about European identity.
Laurent Dubois Roads & Kingdoms Jan 2014 15min Permalink
On the potential existence of personalized bioweapons, which could attack a single individual without leaving a trace, and how they might be stopped.
Andrew Hessel, Marc Goodman, Steven Kotler The Atlantic Oct 2012 35min Permalink
A profile of the 23-year-old woman who was savagely raped on a private bus as it circled New Delhi.
A collection of picks about the best and worst bettors in the world.
In 2007, Harrah’s made 5.6 percent of its total Las Vegas revenue off a single person: Terrance Watanabe.
Alexandra Berzon Wall Street Journal Dec 2009 10min
A story of gambling addiction, in seven parts.
Jay Kang Morning News Oct 2010 20min
“On a small scale, Titanic Thompson is an American legend. I say on a small scale, because an overpowering majority of the public has never heard of him. That is the way Titanic likes it. He is a professional gambler. He has sometimes been called the gambler’s gambler.”
John Lardner True Apr 1951 25min
In 1980, a bankrupt gambler came up with a plan to get his money back. He built an incredibly complex bomb, one that was impossible to defuse and that only he knew how to move, and snuck it into a Lake Tahoe casino with an extortion note demanding $3 million. Part of the plan worked. Part of it did not.
Adam Higginbotham The Atavist Magazine Jul 2014 1h25min
How Billy Walters, the world’s most successful gambler, keeps winning.
Mike Fish ESPN the Magazine Feb 2015 10min
On playing chess and waiting to get arrested.
David Hill McSweeney's Nov 2011 10min
“Again I ask, Is this really the way the American people want it to be?”
Robert F. Kennedy The Atlantic Apr 1962 10min
The men who say they’ll try to save the once-bustling gambling resort town.
Nick Paumgarten New Yorker Aug 2015 40min
Apr 1951 – Aug 2015 Permalink
A series on how some Wall Street bankers, seeking to enrich themselves at the expense of their clients and sometimes even their own firms, at first delayed but then worsened the financial crisis.
Jake Bernstein, Jesse Eisinger ProPublica Jan 2010 55min Permalink
A murder case in Mississippi catches the eye of amateur sleuths on Facebook, who proceed to harass everyone involved in the case.
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Jun 2015 30min Permalink
A reporter heads to Nauru, a tiny island nation in the Pacific, to track down the hub of a worldwide money-laundering operation—a shack filled with computers, air-conditioners, and little else.
Jack Hitt New York Times Magazine Dec 2000 20min Permalink