The Prosecution’s Case Against DNA
Prosecutors have spun creative theories to explain away scientific evidence when DNA tests haven’t fit their version of events.
Prosecutors have spun creative theories to explain away scientific evidence when DNA tests haven’t fit their version of events.
Andrew Martin New York Times Magazine Nov 2011 25min Permalink
A young Jewish man makes a comical attempt to smuggle items into Canada.
"When I sit back in my seat I feel dampness on my ass. My jeans came in contact with some mystery liquid on the lavatory floor. I finish filling out the declaration card. I'd stopped in the middle after reading that I'd have to declare any meat products I'm bringing into Canada."
Eldad Malamuth Chicago Reader Jan 2010 15min Permalink
It had seemed simple in the beginning. Now everything was so complicated, he wasn’t sure what the truth was. He had to admit that he might have gotten involved with the wrong people—that he might have become part of a scam within a scam.
Joshua Davis Wired Nov 2011 Permalink
How the People’s Temple tore one family apart, told in part via letters:
We have at long last opened our hearts to you, expressing the sorrow and agony which we have restrained over six long years. Any time you express the wish to resume normal relations and exchange with us, the past will be forgotten. For after all we do love you and the children more than any other persons. We shall continue to cherish you to our last day on earth. The peerless joy of raising you from childhood to youth is a unique life experience, indeed. Your father and mother
Barry Isaacson LA Weekly Oct 2008 Permalink
Law enforcement vs. local fishermen in Massachusetts.
Brendan Borrell Businessweek Nov 2011 15min Permalink
A statistics-based argument that drug pricing, not drug use or law enformencement, is the only way to predict swings in violent crime rates.
Llewellyn Hinkes-Jones The Atlantic Nov 2011 10min Permalink
On a prison hospice in California.
Kurt Streeter The Los Angeles Times Nov 2011 20min Permalink
Houston detectives investigate a series of brutal assaults on prostitutes in the Acres Homes section of the city. They thought they were after one man; it turns out they were wrong.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 2011 25min Permalink
Central Park wasn’t always so bucolic.
Gangs of toughs—teenagers and the macho middle-aged, usually drunk, occasionally including a couple of off-duty cops—roam the Ramble at night, engaging in an old American pastime: fag bashing. You don't have to be gay. You don't have to be exposing yourself. You don't have to be doing anything except walking through the tangled darkness to be abused, shoved, threatened at knifepoint, kicked, and beaten.
Doug Ireland New York Jul 1978 20min Permalink
A potential pickpocket is set straight by an old woman's kindness.
"Sweat popped out on the boy’s face and he began to struggle. Mrs. Jones stopped, jerked him around in front of her, put a half-nelson about his neck, and continued to drag him up the street."
Langston Hughes Jan 1958 Permalink
On the death of a high school basketball star in New York City.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Nov 2011 20min Permalink
On the post-shooting life of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.
Steve Fishman New York Nov 2011 20min Permalink
The story of a professional assassin.
A moving piece of flash fiction that explores the depths of creativity.
"The figurines are lined up on a shelf in Gary’s office. Gary sells them for the man, who cannot sell them himself because he is serving two consecutive life sentences. The hearts, Gary tells us, are the man’s best sellers."
Lauri Anderson NANO Fiction Jan 2011 Permalink
The father of the first kid featured on a milk carton thinks he knows who kidnapped the him 30 years ago:
For years now, Stan has had a face to concentrate on; twice a year, in fact, on Etan’s birthday and on the anniversary of his disappearance, Stan sends one of the old lost child posters to a man who’s already in prison. He won’t be there much longer, however, unless the successor to Manhattan district attorney Robert Morgenthau can keep him in jail. In the meantime, Stan’s packages serve notice that someone is still paying close attention. On the back of the poster, he always writes the same thing: “What did you do to my little boy?”
Lisa R. Cohen New York May 2009 15min Permalink
The disappearance of Natalee Holloway and the clash of cultures that followed.
Bryan Burrough Vanity Fair Jan 2006 40min Permalink
The world’s fastest growing economy isn’t China; it’s the “unheralded alternative economic universe of System D” aka the $10 trillion global black market.
Robert Neuwirth Foreign Policy Oct 2011 10min Permalink
Ten years ago, a man moved to Marsing, Idaho. He had a strange accent and didn't know much about cattle. The folks in Marsing were a little skeptical at first, but when he built a house and started a family, he earned his neighbors' acceptance. Last February, while buying hay, he was cornered by federal agents and arrested for violent crimes tied to the Boston Mob. And the town wondered: Who the hell is Jay Shaw?
Sean Flynn GQ Nov 2011 25min Permalink
A tricked-out Toyota Supra accelerates a family's unraveling. From the author of 2011's Busy Monsters.
"I know the ins and outs of what he did to that car, the numbers and brands and details, perhaps better than I know anything else on earth: I spent my most formative years steeped in this information, flipping through the automotive magazines with him, attending weekend car shows, listening to his ecstatic dinner-time talk of his next modification, of how that Supra would be the slickest in all of New Jersey."
William Giraldi Antioch Review Jan 2009 15min Permalink
On the brutal killing of a high school girl in British Columbia.
David Kushner Vanity Fair Oct 2011 20min Permalink
How LA-style gang life migrated to the slums of San Salvador.
Alma Guillermoprieto New York Review of Books Oct 2011 15min Permalink
An insult leads to an unsettling form of revenge.
"As I said these words I busied myself among the pile of bones of which I have before spoken. Throwing them aside, I soon uncovered a quantity of building stone and mortar."
Edgar Allan Poe Jan 1846 10min Permalink
A charismatic entrepreneur, an ex-con turned devout Christian, and the politicians who championed them.
The story of a $36 billion Ponzi scheme in Minnesota.
Mariah Blake The New Republic Oct 2011 35min Permalink
A guy just out of prison drops in at a party, with zombies on his mind.
"It turned out that everyone in the prison had a zombie contingency plan, once you asked them, just like everyone in prison had a prison escape plan, only nobody talked about those. Soap tried not to dwell on escape plans, although sometimes he dreamed that he was escaping. Then the zombies would show up. They always showed up in his escape dreams. You could escape prison, but you couldn’t escape zombies."
Kelly Link Jan 2005 35min Permalink
How Timothy Patrick Barrus, a white writer of gay erotica, reinvented himself a (wildly successful) Native American memoirist.
Matthew Fleischer LA Weekly Jan 2006 35min Permalink