The Departed
On a November morning, Olympic rower and financial advisor Harold Backer left for a bike ride and never returned. His disappearance remained a mystery – until letters began arriving at the homes of his investors.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
On a November morning, Olympic rower and financial advisor Harold Backer left for a bike ride and never returned. His disappearance remained a mystery – until letters began arriving at the homes of his investors.
Kip McDaniel Chief Investment Officer Feb 2016 25min Permalink
The activists fighting for police reform in the wake of a video that showed a black teenager shot 16 times by a white cop.
Ben Austen New York Times Magazine Apr 2016 15min Permalink
Four men stood on the edge of the Shenzhen Health and Family Planning Commission, threatening to jump in protest. They referred to themselves as “China’s 21st century eunuchs,” damaged by medically-dubious surgeries.
RW McMorrow Vice May 2016 25min Permalink
50onRed is a fixture in Philly’s startup world. But there’s something the leadership didn’t talk about, even with some of its own staff. They make malware.
Juliana Reyes Backchannel May 2016 10min Permalink
For decades, the lead actor at an acclaimed storefront Chicago theater beat, groped, and choked his female co-stars in front of audiences, while manipulating them into coercive relationships offstage.
Aimee Levitt, Christopher Piatt Chicago Reader Jun 2016 50min Permalink
“The patron saint of adult thumb-suckers is a 65-year-old Long Island salesman who looks strikingly like Hunter S. Thompson, down to the tinted aviator sunglasses and bald spot.”
Pearl Gabel Lenny Jul 2016 Permalink
The fire department working a desolate New Mexico mesa is made up of 15 anarchists and recluses and led by a friendly giant whose job is to be an administrator in a place that defies administration.
Michael Canyon Meyer This Land Aug 2016 25min Permalink
An artist at the end of his life.
David Remnick New Yorker Oct 2016 45min Permalink
When Larycia Hawkins, the first black woman to receive tenure at Wheaton College, made a symbolic gesture of support for Muslims, the evangelical college became divided over what intellectual freedom on its campus really meant.
Ruth Graham New York Times Magazine Oct 2016 25min Permalink
When a wealthy businessman set out to divorce his wife, their fortune vanished. The quest to find it would reveal the depths of an offshore financial system bigger than the U.S. economy.
Nicholas Confessore New York Times Magazine Nov 2016 35min Permalink
When the prosecutor in a 1924 trial focused on the murder of a priest backed the suspect–and everything that followed.
Ken Armstrong The Marshall Project Dec 2016 25min Permalink
In 1991, Edwin Debrow shot and killed a cab driver on the east side of San Antonio. He was twelve years old. Twenty-five years later, he is still in prison. Is that justice? And is there room for mercy?
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 2016 30min Permalink
No one understands our new era of reality-TV populism better than the man who turned “The Real Housewives” into an empire.
Taffy Brodeser-Akner New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Abdullahi Yusuf was 18 and ready to dedicate his life to ISIS when federal agents pulled him aside in the Minneapolis airport. He will never see the inside of a jail cell.
Brendan I. Koerner Wired Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Franklin Leonard’s anonymous survey has launched careers, recognized four of the past eight Best Picture winners, and pushed movie studios to think beyond sequels and action flicks.
Alex Wagner The Atlantic Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Did a handsome young Green Beret doctor kill his pregnant wife and two daughters? Or, as he claims, did a group of candle-carrying hippies carry out a vicious home invasion while chanting “Acid is groovy, kill the pigs”? A mystery that spanned three decades.
Robert Sam Anson Vanity Fair Jul 1998 40min Permalink
Grammy-winning liner notes describing the rise, fall, and rebirth of Roky Erickson, who founded the psychedelic rock pioneers The Thirteenth Floor Elevators before a charge stemming from a single marijuana joint landed him in a Texas mental hospital.
Will Sheff willsheff.com Jan 2010 25min Permalink
Dr. Elisabeth Targ became famous for running scientific experiments that appeared to prove the healing power of faith. Then she got sick and became a test subject herself.
Po Bronson Wired Dec 2002 25min Permalink
An investigation into the Dr. Anthony Bosch and his “East Coast version of BALCO,” which allegedly supplied baseball stars Alex Rodriguez, Melky Cabrera and others with performance-enhancing drugs.
Tim Elfrink The Miami New Times Jan 2013 20min Permalink
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The most prolific duo in history, the Texas woman who robbed banks dressed a pudgy cowboy, and the story that inspired Dog Day Afternon — a collection of our favorite stories about bank robberies.
Ray Bowman and Billy Kirkpatrick, who began boosting together as teenagers, were arrested only twice during their prolific partnership. The first time was for stealing 38 records from a K-Mart in 1974. The second arrest came in 1997. In between, Bowman and Kirkpatrick robbed 27 banks, including the single biggest haul in United States history: $4,461,681 from the Seafirst Bank in suburban Tacoma.
Alex Kotlowitz New Yorker Jul 2002 20min
Peggy Jo Tallas, a soft-spoken bachelorette, spent much of her adult life doing two things: taking care of her ailing mother and robbing bank after bank dressed as a pudgy, bearded cowboy.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Nov 2005 35min
Anthony Curcio was the pride of his small town in Washington state. A former football star, he had married his high-school sweetheart and was making good money flipping houses. Then the real estate market crashed, and Curcio turned his obsessive attention to planning an ingenious heist involving Craigslist, an inner tube, and $400,000.
David Kushner GQ Oct 2010
The robbers had a helicopter, explosives, and inside information on a $150 million cash repository. But the police were on to them—sort of.
Evan Ratliff Atavist Magazine Jan 2011 45min
A young man named John Wojtowicz, desperate to provide for his children and finance his lover’s sex-change surgery, attempts to rob a Chase branch in Brooklyn. The bank is surrounded almost immediately and a 14-hour standoff ensues. The story inspired Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon.
P. F. Kluge, Thomas Moore LIFE Sep 1972
In 2003, a man named Brian Wells robbed a bank in Erie, Pa., with a bomb around his neck. Shortly thereafter, with Wells surrounded by cops and claiming he’d been forced to commit the crime, the bomb detonated, leaving authorities to piece together who had put it there. Eight years later, they’re still not entirely sure who was behind this bizarre crime, or even the true motive.
Rich Schapiro Wired Dec 2010 20min
How a 24-year-old nurse discovered Vegas, high-stakes gambling, and serial bank robbery.
Jeff Maysh BBC Apr 2015 25min
Sep 1972 – Apr 2015 Permalink
After watching his father Sandy abuse his paralyzed former-jockey mother for years, Mat Crichton committed murder. Nearly the entire local farming community rallied in support of him.
Jana G. Pruden The Edmonton Journal Mar 2013 Permalink
Aaron Greene and Morgan Gliedman were young and in love and pregnant and partial to heroin and living in a Village apartment with a lot of heavy weaponry lying about. Then they were arrested, and their stories started to change.
Robert Kolker New York Mar 2013 20min Permalink
The story of Christopher Knight, who lived in the Maine woods for 27 years with virtually no human contact.
Craig Crosby Kennebec Journal Apr 2013 10min Permalink
In the not-so-distant future, all of our objects will talk to each other. They’ll make our coffee, find our keys, save our lives. The roadmap to a fully networked existence.
Bill Wasik Wired May 2013 Permalink