One Drug Dealer, Two Corrupt Cops, and a Risky FBI Sting
Davon Mayer was a smalltime dealer in west Baltimore who made an illicit deal with local police. Then they turned on him.
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
Meet the inspiration for Barbara Loden’s Wanda.
Sarah Weinman Topic Oct 2017 20min Permalink
Emma Perrier was deceived by an older man on the internet—and then she found love with the model whose photographs he had stolen.
Jeff Maysh The Atlantic Oct 2017 20min Permalink
The rise and fall of the “most far-flung, most organized, and most brazen example of homosexual extortion in the nation’s history.”
William McGowan Slate Jul 2012 30min Permalink
On the new art of interrogation.
Ian Leslie The Guardian Oct 2017 25min Permalink
Eight calls to 911. Three visits by five police officers. One woman’s senseless death.
Vivan Ho San Francisco Chronicle Oct 2017 25min Permalink
A con artist terrorizes a California family.
Five murders. Two confessions. A mysterious envelope.
Adam Wren Indianapolis Monthly Oct 2017 20min Permalink
An Oklahoma rehab center puts defendants to grueling, dangerous work in a chicken processing plant. They receive neither pay nor treatment for their addictions.
Amy Julia Harris, Shoshana Walter Reveal Oct 2017 Permalink
Tim Piazza fought for his life for 12 hours before his Beta Theta Pi brothers called 911. By then, it was too late.
Caitlin Flanagan The Atlantic Oct 2017 40min Permalink
Andrea Bernstein, Jesse Eisinger, Justin Elliott, Ilya Marritz ProPublica, WNYC Oct 2017 15min Permalink
The short friendship of Kody Robertson and Michelle Vo.
Wesley Lowery Washington Post Oct 2017 Permalink
Guardians can sell the assets and control the lives of senior citizens without their consent—and reap a profit from it.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Oct 2017 35min Permalink
In 1921, a teenager died alone in Kentucky and was buried without a name. A century later, a team of sleuths set out to find his identity.
Alina Simone The Atavist Magazine Sep 2017 1h Permalink
What happens after a defendant is found not guilty by reason of insanity? Often the answer is involuntary confinement in a state psychiatric hospital—with no end in sight.
Mac McClelland New York Times Magazine Sep 2017 30min Permalink
The material powers solar panels and microchips. In Alabama, two thieves cashed in.
Brendan Koerner Wired Sep 2017 20min Permalink
The intertwined destinies of Siti Aisyah, a 25-year-old devout Muslim villager turned prostitute and eventual assassin, and Kim Jong-nam, who was raised as the heir to the North Korean dictatorship and died in a Malaysian airport.
Doug Bock Clark GQ Sep 2017 30min Permalink
It turns out “Madame Giselle” wasn’t any of these things, couldn’t make her Chevy Chase, Maryland, neighbors rich, and may have been at the center of a massive scandal in Colombia.
Manuel Roig-Franzia Washington Post Sep 2017 20min Permalink
“When he’s judged I’m judged.”
Gary Younge The Guardian Sep 2017 10min Permalink
The story of a Pacific Palisades con man named Jeffrey Lash.
Scott Johnson The Hollywood Reporter Sep 2017 25min Permalink
Inside the Tacoma Northwest Detention Center, “an opaque system that literally disappears people” accused of immigrating illegally.
Corey Pein The Baffler Sep 2017 30min Permalink
Police have dragged the lake. They’ve dug up property. They’ve brought in dogs. But after twenty years, they still can’t find the bodies of the four missing seniors in Muskoka.
Zander Sherman The Walrus Sep 2017 20min Permalink
In El Salvador, more and more young women are choosing—or being forced into—gang life.
Lauren Markham Pacific Standard Sep 2017 25min Permalink
A case in Baltimore — in which two men were convicted of the same murder and cleared by DNA 20 years later — shows how far prosecutors will go to preserve a conviction.
Megan Rose ProPublica Sep 2017 30min Permalink
Christian Longo brutally murdered his familyand then posed in Mexico as a New York Times reporter named Michael Finkel. From death row, Longo asked the real Finkel to attend his execution.
Michael Finkel Esquire Dec 2009 1h Permalink