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Our reporters are opening up their investigation into the Red Cross, its disaster relief efforts and where it failed. Join the discussion.
Theo Meyer discusses an accidentally released document that showed how a mining company’s secret donations helped pass a bill in Wisconsin.
Some of the best #MuckReads we read this week. Want to receive these by email? Sign up to get this briefing delivered to your inbox every weekend.
In Niagara County, N.Y., leaders took on 40-year debt to pay for short-term stuff, a case study in the perverse incentives tobacco bonds create.
New York counties were promised annual payments from tobacco companies as part of a national settlement to reimburse them for smoking-related health care costs. Some made deals to get up front cash instead of long term payments. Here's what they gave up.
A refinance of Niagara County’s tobacco bonds was good news — but for investors, not taxpayers.
Users can see how interest rates and declining cigarette sales affect the bottom line for counties that borrowed against income from the landmark tobacco settlement.
From dark money to a mysterious super PAC donor, here are a few of the best investigations of money in politics since the last elections.
Julia Angwin and Jeff Larson on blurring borders in an Internet age and the tension between national security and personal privacy.
Some of the best #MuckReads we read this week. Want to receive these by email? Sign up to get this briefing delivered to your inbox every weekend.
More than two years ago, a ProPublica series showed that white applicants were far more likely to receive clemency than comparable applicants who were black. Since then, the government has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on a study, but the pardons system remains unchanged.
Documents describe "contractual relationships" between NSA and U.S. companies, as well as undercover operatives at some U.S. companies.
The way lenders and collectors pursue consumer debt has undergone an aggressive transformation in America. Collectors today don’t give up easy, often pursuing debts for years. It’s now routine for companies to sue debtors, then seize their wages or the cash in their bank accounts. For many people, these changes have profoundly affected their lives.
8 Stories in the Series. Latest:
In 1964, whites and blacks joined to, as some put it, drag Mississippi back into the United States. Violence erupted. Lives were lost. But change was wrought, too.
10 Stories in the Series. Latest:
ProPublica investigates the threats to privacy in an era of cellphones, data mining and cyberwar, including how citizens are digitally tracked by governments and corporations.
51 Stories in the Series. Latest:
NSA Documents Suggest a Close Working Relationship Between NSA, U.S. Companies
Temp employment is climbing to record levels following the Great Recession. The system benefits brand-name companies but harms American workers through lost wages, high injury rates, few if any benefits, and little opportunity for advancement.
14 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Do you know a child who has been forcibly restrained or secluded at school? Help us investigate by sharing your story.
3 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Federal Investigators Crack Down on Two Virginia Schools’ Use of Restraints