The Man Who Shot the Man Who Shot Lincoln
The strange life of Boston Corbett, the soldier who killed John Wilkes Booth in 1865.
The strange life of Boston Corbett, the soldier who killed John Wilkes Booth in 1865.
Ernest B. Ferguson The American Scholar Apr 2009 15min Permalink
The story of dog-scent lineup innovator Keith Pikett and the not-so-scientific science behind forensics.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly May 2010 35min Permalink
A private investigator asks a magazine to write a puff piece on his business. The journalist finds a real story.
Peter Crooks Diablo Magazine Apr 2011 Permalink
In 1991, Frank Sterling confessed to a crime he didn’t commit. His story highlights a common – and controversial – method of police interrogation.
Robert Kolker New York Oct 2010 25min Permalink
The barbaric brutalization of Abner Louima and the tragic fate of a handful of flawed Brooklyn cops.
Craig Horowitz New York Oct 1999 25min Permalink
Sheikh Amer Hassan’s parties were notoriously debauched, evidence of a growing permissiveness in Karachi high society. His murder by a pair of young brothers surprised few.
Faiza Sultan Khan Open Mar 2011 10min Permalink
Has Mexico become a failed state?
David Rieff The New Republic Mar 2011 10min Permalink
Schaeffer Cox, who is accused of plotting to kill State Troopers and a federal judge, shifted rapidly from a Ron Paul campaign worker and Tea Party activist to a hardcore militia leader. His conspiracy revealed, mainstream Alaskan politicians are scrambling to distance themselves from their ties to Cox.
David Holthouse Anchorage Press Mar 2011 Permalink
Investigating the investigation of the 2001 anthrax attacks.
Noah Shachtman Wired Apr 2011 1h10min Permalink
The story of Dean Corll and his accomplices, who killed over 20 teenage boys in the Heights neighborhood of Houston in the early 1970s, and the families searching for their missing sons.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Apr 2011 45min Permalink
Best Article Crime History Science
In the 1880’s, a shabbily dressed man popped up in numerous America cities, calling upon local scientists, showing letters of introduction claiming he was a noted geologist or paleontologist, discussing both fields at a staggeringly accomplished level, and then making off with valuable books or cash loans.
- Skulls in the Stars Feb 2011 30min Permalink
On the many lives and careers of Owsley Stanley (1935-2011), chemist, sound design innovator, and outback jeweler, whose name appears in the OED as a synonym for “a particularly pure form of LSD.”
Robert Greenfield Rolling Stone Jul 2007 30min Permalink
An undercover report on Afghanistan’s drug-smuggling border police that is now heavily used for intelligence training.
Matthieu Aikins Harper's Dec 2009 Permalink
Depending on who you ask, Mohammed Jawad was either 12 or 17 when he was detained. Nobody disputes that he spent seven years at Guantánamo before he was exonerated. The story of a boy who grew up as a detainee.
Michael Paterniti GQ Feb 2011 35min Permalink
Why did a small-town girl have her family brutally murdered?
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Jun 2009 35min Permalink
One part rapist, one part con-man; the story of the seemingly unconvictable Hy Doan.
Denise Grollmus Cleveland Scene Sep 2005 15min Permalink
Stuck between the Taliban and the U.S. Military, Afghanistan’s farmers risk their lives both when they grow, and when they refuse to grow, fields of poppies.
Robert Draper National Geographic Feb 2011 20min Permalink
Prison rape is an epidemic; but the bulk of abuses are not by prisoners themselves, but by guards and other prison workers.
David Kaiser, Lovisa Stannow NY Review of Books Mar 2011 15min Permalink
After nearly 15 years in a Peruvian prison, an American woman convicted of aiding a Marxist terrorist group finds parole in Lima full of contradictions.
The decades-long saga of Miami’s Take Once Cocktail Lounge, where you might get shot, your money will definitely be laundered, and everybody will know your name.
Gus Garcia-Roberts The Miami New Times Feb 2011 20min Permalink
How the culture of academia helped Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama scientist who murdered colleagues during a faculty meeting, fall apart.
Amy Wallace Wired Mar 2011 35min Permalink
First-person accounts from the 2004 siege of a Russian school in Beslan by Chechen terrorists.
C.J. Chivers Esquire Mar 2007 Permalink
“One evening, my home phone rang. ‘You have a collect call from Bernard Madoff, an inmate at a federal prison,’ a recording announced. And there he was.”
Steve Fishman New York Mar 2011 30min Permalink
The Gabrielle Giffords shooting, from the vantage point of three central figures: Daniel Hernandez helped save the congresswoman’s life; Patricia Maisch stopped the shooter from reloading; Bill Badger tackled him.
Amy Wallace GQ Mar 2011 15min Permalink
At the very bottom of the porn totem pole is the “mope”, a barely paid assistant who hangs around and occasionally performs. Stephen Hill was mope-ing for Ultima Studios in exchange for pocket money and a place to crash. Learning he was going to be evicted, he sharpened a prop machete.
Michael Albo LA Weekly Feb 2011 15min Permalink