Truth or Consequences
The story behind the story that ended Dan Rather’s career.
The story behind the story that ended Dan Rather’s career.
Joe Hagan Texas Monthly May 2012 40min Permalink
She survived an evil, gruesome attack. Her partner did not. An account of a victim, a widow, telling her story on the witness stand.
Update, 4/16/12: This piece was just awarded the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing.
Eli Sanders The Stranger Jun 2011 20min Permalink
On a Victorian-era murder case, and the novel it inspired.
Rachel Cooke The Guardian Apr 2012 10min Permalink
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
The toll of being a cop on the most successful force in the country.
Chris Smith New York Apr 2012 25min Permalink
An investigative look at the killing of Trayvon Martin.
Campbell Robertson, Dan Barry, Lizette Alvarez, Serge F. Kovaleski New York Times Apr 2012 20min Permalink
Is a serial killer on the loose in Wellfleet? An investigation.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Jan 2000 30min Permalink
A clandestine meeting between Western journalists and Hezbollah fighters in a Beirut strip mall.
Mitchell Prothero Vice Mar 2012 25min Permalink
How life has changed in the neighborhood where Trayvon Martin was killed.
Lane DeGregory The Tampa Bay Times Mar 2012 10min Permalink
How the CIA, under a program called MK-ULTRA, used a San Francisco apartment to dose johns with LSD.
Troy Hooper San Francisco Weekly Mar 2012 Permalink
An investigation into Erin Brockovich and the lawsuits that made her famous.
Eric Umansky The New Republic Nov 2003 20min Permalink
A report from the trial of Ivan Demjanjuk—a.k.a. “The Last Nazi”—who died on March 17.
Lawrence Douglas Harper's Mar 2012 Permalink
There was torture, starvation, betrayals and executions, but to Shin In Geun, Camp 14—a prison for the political enemies of North Korea—was home. Then one day came the chance to flee.
Blaine Harden The Guardian Mar 2012 Permalink
Virginia authorities possess DNA evidence that may exonerate dozens of convicted men. Why won’t the state say who they are?
Dahlia Lithwick Slate Mar 2012 10min Permalink
The noon chimes in the bell-clock tower rising above him to the building's 307-foot pinnacle sounded: pom-pom-pom-pom . . . 16 notes, high and sweet. Some say the chimes say a poem: "Lord, through this hour "Be Thou my guide, "For in Thy power "I do confide." After the chimes, there is a long pause -- 23 seconds if you hold a wristwatch on it -- time enough for a practiced man to reload three rifles and a shotgun.
“Doc” Quigg’s wire report on the 1966 Texas Tower shooting on the campus of UT-Austin.
H.D. Quigg United Press International Aug 1966 10min Permalink
A profile of the world’s most notorious weapons trafficker.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Mar 2012 35min Permalink
Lance Butterfield was the captain of the football team, had a 4.0 GPA and a girl he loved. It wasn’t enough for his dad. And then his dad became too much for him.
Part of our guide to Skip Hollandsworth’s true crime writing at Slate.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Jun 1998 30min Permalink
On solitary confinement:
"Two or three hundred years from now people will look back on this lockdown mania like we look back on the burning of witches."
The profile of a crime syndicate which dominates the European cocaine trade.
Andreas Ulrich Der Spiegel Jan 2012 20min Permalink
Forty years ago, a man was killed in Chicago because he was black. The daughter he never met is still searching for clues about his death.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Mar 2012 45min Permalink
In an odd way, crime has fallen off the political landscape. To an extent it's been replaced on the agenda by concern about the dire consequences of mass incarceration. But violent crime itself remains a major area in which the United States lags behind other developed countries. To suggest that smarter management of the criminal justice system could make it less brutal while simultaneously creating large reductions in the quantity of crime sounds utopian. And yet the proposals for parole system reform found in this article are utterly convincing.
Mark A. R. Kleiman Washington Monthly Jul 2009 15min Permalink
The hunt for rare 1933 Double Eagle coins:
The U.S. Secret Service, responsible for protecting the nation’s currency, has been pursuing them for nearly 70 years, through 13 Administrations and 12 different directors. The investigation has spanned three continents and involved some of the most famous coin collectors in the world, a confidential informant, a playboy king, and a sting operation at the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan. It has inspired two novels, two nonfiction books, and a television documentary. And much of it has centered around a coin dealer, dead since 1990, whose shop is still open in South Philadelphia, run by his 82-year-old daughter.
Susan Berfield Businessweek Aug 2011 15min Permalink
The landmark article that changed the way communities were policed:
This wish to "decriminalize" disreputable behavior that "harms no one"- and thus remove the ultimate sanction the police can employ to maintain neighborhood order—is, we think, a mistake. Arresting a single drunk or a single vagrant who has harmed no identifiable person seems unjust, and in a sense it is. But failing to do anything about a score of drunks or a hundred vagrants may destroy an entire community. A particular rule that seems to make sense in the individual case makes no sense when it is made a universal rule and applied to all cases. It makes no sense because it fails to take into account the connection between one broken window left untended and a thousand broken windows.
George L. Kelling, James Q. Wilson The Atlantic Mar 1982 25min Permalink
On prisoners with Alzheimer’s disease and their incarcerated caretakers.
Pam Belluck New York Times Feb 2012 Permalink
"Opium does not deprive you of your senses. It does not make a madman of you. But drink does. See? Who ever heard of a man committing murder when full of hop. Get him full of whiskey and he might kill his father."
A journey into New York’s turn-of-the-century opium dens to find out who gets hooked and why.