The Truce on Drugs
In Colorado and beyond, a negotiated surrender in the war on drugs.
In Colorado and beyond, a negotiated surrender in the war on drugs.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Nov 2012 30min Permalink
Trevell Coleman wasn’t sure whether he’d killed a man. But after 17 years, he needed to find out.
Jennifer Gonnerman New York Nov 2012 20min Permalink
An alleged rape and one woman’s futile quest for justice in modern China.
john Garnaut, Sanghee Liu Foreign Policy Nov 2012 10min Permalink
On the experimental favela police force UPP (aka “The Big Skull”) and their efforts to clean Rio’s largest slum in advance of the World Cup and Olympics.
Misha Glenny The Financial Times Nov 2012 15min Permalink
Behind the tabloid story of the “murder orphan” in Queens.
At various points, Thomas Mitchell was a novelist, an attorney, a scientist, a Hollywood dealmaker and a CIA higher-up. He was also a con man.
Thomas Mullen Atlanta Magazine Oct 2012 30min Permalink
Money, fraud and a sacred prophecy.
Brantley Hargrove Dallas Observer Nov 2012 Permalink
An essay on Jimmy Savile, British television and child sexual abuse.
Andrew O'Hagan London Review of Books Nov 2012 30min Permalink
How modernity – and an eruption of violence – changed “the most remote inhabited island on the Atlantic seaboard.”
Geoffrey Douglas Yankee Sep 2011 Permalink
A woman's communications and interactions with a potential criminal.
"The beaten man lurches to his feet and pulls out a shape, a gun, from his pocket–somehow it must have escaped the notice of the other men before. He staggers backward into the porticos and I can no longer see him. But a minute later I can hear him yelling in English as he storms up the stairs of my building, calling, 'Help! Help!' and hammering on doors. There are several banging sounds as though he’s fallen."
Molly Dektar Knee-Jerk Jan 2012 Permalink
Life inside Long Island’s largest cluster of sex offenders.
Jennifer Gonnerman New York Dec 2007 20min Permalink
The strange existence of the accused Internet pirate as he battles the U.S. government.
Charles Graeber Wired Oct 2012 45min Permalink
A California martial arts instructor’s secret past.
Previously: Finding Oscar
Sebastian Rotella ProPublica Oct 2012 20min Permalink
A strange, ongoing property battle among the richest of Texans.
Terrence McCoy Houston Press Oct 2012 20min Permalink
How a couple made millions on uncanny forgeries.
Joshua Hammer Vanity Fair Oct 2012 35min Permalink
How one woman is monitoring the jihadi network from a home office in Montana.
How Tony Galeota went from mobbed-up teen on Long Island to legendary strip club manager in Miami to distraught prisoner in a Panamanian jail.
Michael E. Miller The Miami New Times Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Ten years after D.C. area sniper shootings, an interview with Lee Boyd Malvo.
Josh White Washington Post Sep 2012 10min Permalink
How a small-town comptroller became the biggest municipal embezzler in U.S. history.
Bryan Smith Chicago Magazine Oct 2012 Permalink
A family’s struggle with mental illness and the criminal justice system.
Brantley Hargrove Dallas Observer Sep 2012 25min Permalink
What the wife of a ponzi schemer knew.
Tony D'Souza Sarasota Magazine Sep 2012 Permalink
Joe Arridy had an IQ of 46. In 1939, he was executed for a crime he neither understood nor committed.
Alan Prendergast Westword Sep 2012 30min Permalink
Is a Marine responsible for a series of violent attacks against women?
Harry Jaffe Washingtonian Sep 2012 30min Permalink
It started as a bluebird New Year’s Day in Mount Rainier National Park. But when a gunman murdered a ranger and then fled back into the park’s frozen backcountry, every climber, skier, and camper became a suspect—and a potential victim.
Bruce Barcott Outside Sep 2012 Permalink
Did a handsome young Green Beret doctor kill his pregnant wife and two daughters? Or, as he claims, did a group of candle-carrying hippies carry out a vicious home invasion while chanting “Acid is groovy, kill the pigs”? A mystery that spanned three decades.
Robert Sam Anson Vanity Fair Jul 1998 40min Permalink