How Chicago's 'Fraternal Order of Propaganda' Shapes the Story of Fatal Police Shootings
When cops kill civilians, their union is on hand to defend them. In many cases this has come at the expense of the truth.
When cops kill civilians, their union is on hand to defend them. In many cases this has come at the expense of the truth.
Yana Kunichoff, Sam Stecklow Chicago Reader Feb 2016 25min Permalink
Before ending up in Rikers, Jeremy Wilson — if that’s his real name — had portrayed himself as a Scottish-born DJ, a Cambridge-trained thespian, a Special Forces officer, a professor at MIT, an Apple executive, a soldier seeking asylum in Canada to escape anti-Semitic attacks in the United States, and an Irish mobster. Among others.
James C. McKinley Jr., Rick Rojas New York Times Feb 2016 15min Permalink
Defensive end Shawn King was the 36th pick in the 1995 draft. His career with the Carolina Panthers didn’t turn out as planned.
Michael Graff SB Nation Jan 2016 25min Permalink
Asunta Fong Yang was adopted as a baby by a wealthy Spanish couple. Aged 12, she was found dead beside a country road. Not long after, her mother and father were arrested.
Giles Tremlett The Guardian Feb 2016 20min Permalink
There is a little-known network of 11 federal prisons in America called Criminal Alien Requirement facilities. They exclusively house men who lack U.S. citizenship and have been convicted of crimes. They are all run privately. And over the last 18 years, they have allowed scores of inmates to die from diseases that could have been treated.
Seth Freed Wessler The Nation Jan 2016 Permalink
How forensic anthropologist Sue Black does her job.
Helen Lewis New Statesman Jan 2016 30min Permalink
How an art shipper took advantage of the market’s opaque rules and shadowy deal-making to rip off a Russian oligarch.
Sam Knight New Yorker Feb 2016 35min Permalink
Should having an intellectual disability disqualify a mother from raising her child?
Lisa Miller New York Jan 2016 30min Permalink
How a distillery worker in Kentucky stole hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of bourbon, one barrel at a time.
Reeves Wiedeman Men's Journal Mar 2016 15min Permalink
Life and death with the young and radicalized.
Alex Perry Newsweek Jan 2015 55min Permalink
Government agencies have been trying to protect children for nearly 200 years. They are still failing.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2016 35min Permalink
The mysterious death of a champion Irish setter.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2016 15min Permalink
The story of Akai Gurley before he was killed by a New York City police officer.
Alex Ronan Buzzfeed Jan 2016 30min Permalink
Arno Smit bilked millions out of Tulare County dairy workers (and at least one wealthy widow). Then he disappeared.
Tessa Stuart California Sunday Jan 2016 25min Permalink
A war criminal’s life on the run.
Julian Borger The Guardian Jan 2016 25min Permalink
After his daughter died in a terrorist attack, Stephen Flatow won an unprecedented judgment against her killers. Then he had to figure out how to actually collect.
M.R. O'Conner The Atavist Magazine Jan 2016 50min Permalink
In 2006, Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian spy working for British intelligence, was poisoned. As he lay dying, he worked with detectives to find his killer.
Luke Harding The Guardian Jan 2016 25min Permalink
After Daniel Rigmaiden was arrested for a multi-million dollar fraud, he didn’t argue that he was innocent. He wasn’t. But he couldn’t understand how he had been caught. Rigmaiden had covered his tracks meticulously — the only way the cops could’ve found him, he realized, was through some secret tracking device that they had never disclosed to the public.
Russell Brandom The Verge Jan 2016 20min Permalink
What seems like a slam-dunk case against a mass murderer exposes widespread prosecutorial misconduct in Orange County.
Edward Humes Orange County Register Jan 2016 1h20min Permalink
A secret meeting, and short Q&A, with the drug lord while he was still on the lam.
Sean Penn Rolling Stone Jan 2016 45min Permalink
Last February, John Jonchuck Jr. dropped his 5-year-old daughter off a bridge to her death. This is the story of what happened, and what didn’t, in the years before the murder made headlines.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jan 2016 25min Permalink
After Brooke Melton died in a car crash, her parents approached attorney Lance Cooper to investigate. What he found in her 2005 Chevy Cobalt would lead to GM’s 30 million-vehicle recall.
Max Blau Atlanta Magazine Jan 2016 25min Permalink
Inside New Haven’s Special Victims Unit.
Kathy Dobie New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 35min Permalink
A case of peafowl dividing a neighborhood.
Mike Kessler Los Angeles Jan 2016 25min Permalink
Rabbi Barry Freundel said he would help dozens of women convert to Judaism. In the process, he secretly videotaped them naked.
Harry Jaffe Washingtonian Jan 2016 25min Permalink