Courting Favor: 'The People's Lawyers'
By ERIC LIPTON
Attorneys general have become the object of pursuit by lobbyists who use campaign contributions, personal appeals and other means to sway investigations or negotiate favorable deals, an investigation by The New York Times has found.
By SHERI FINK
Liberia has far fewer people being treated for Ebola than anticipated, but health officials are hesitant to declare victory.
By THOMAS ERDBRINK
President Hassan Rouhani has pledged a bright economic future to follow the lifting of sanctions, but his promises are starting to ring hollow as talks stall.
By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ and MICHAEL WINERIP
William Clemons, the top uniformed officer, along with two high-ranking colleagues, will be leaving as the Correction Department faces intensifying criticism over brutality at the jail.
By DOREEN CARVAJAL
After 40 years, the way has been cleared to complete Mr. Welles’s unfinished final opus, “The Other Side of the Wind.”
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
In running for the Senate in Iowa, Joni Ernst has helped write a new playbook for Republican female candidates by building a surprisingly enthusiastic base of support — among men.