Search by name, by affiliated business or institution, or by city.
Examples: Jones, University of Texas, Brooklyn
Though millions of instances of housing discrimination occur each year, only about 10,000 complaints are filed annually. Do you know firsthand about housing discrimination? Tell us your story.
As Congress prepares to send it to President Obama, a guide to the controversial defense spending bill’s provisions about detention and the laws of war.
The agency’s new system to put political ad spending information online turned out to be deeply flawed.
A House subcommittee on veterans' affairs hears from veterans groups after a ProPublica-Seattle Times investigation revealing that dozens of Army units failed to keep sufficient records of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Mystery solved. Syria had requested to ferry attack helicopters from Russia over Iraq, but the flights hadn't happened. Now, the Iraqis say they denied permission.
Here’s what law enforcement can get on you without establishing “probable cause.”
The second participant in ProPublica's Pair Programming Project is Ricardo Brom from La Nación in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Though millions of instances of housing discrimination occur each year, only about 10,000 complaints are filed annually. Do you know firsthand about housing discrimination? Tell us your story.
A House subcommittee on veterans' affairs hears from veterans groups after a ProPublica-Seattle Times investigation revealing that dozens of Army units failed to keep sufficient records of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Injection wells used to dispose of the nation’s most toxic waste are showing increasing signs of stress as regulatory oversight falls short and scientific assumptions prove flawed.
5 Stories in the Series. Latest:
The Trillion-Gallon Loophole: Lax Rules for Drillers that Inject Pollutants Into the Earth
White criminals seeking presidential pardons are nearly four times as likely to succeed as people of color, a ProPublica examination has found.
25 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Obama Has Granted Clemency More Rarely Than Any Modern President
In 1982 amid Guatemala’s civil war, 20 army commandos invaded Dos Erres disguised as rebels. The squad members, or Kaibiles, killed more than 250 people. Only a handful survived. One, a 3-year-old boy, was abducted by a Kaibil officer and raised by his family. It took 30 years for Oscar Alfredo Ramírez Castañeda to learn the truth.
8 Stories in the Series. Latest:
How an Accused Guatemalan War Criminal Won U.S., Canadian Citizenship
There is no firm timetable on the return of some of New York's largest hospitals. And concern is rising that the patchwork system can't last for long.
ProPublica is tracking the financial ties between doctors and medical companies.
42 Stories in the Series. Latest: