The Girl on the Bridge
Seattle’s Aurora Bridge has been the most notorious suicide site in the Northwest for 80 years. On one man’s fight to erect a fence and the race to save one last jumper.
Seattle’s Aurora Bridge has been the most notorious suicide site in the Northwest for 80 years. On one man’s fight to erect a fence and the race to save one last jumper.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Jul 2011 20min Permalink
Coping with a brother’s suicide.
We tell stories about the dead in order that they may live, if not in body then at least in mind—the minds of those left behind. Although the dead couldn’t care less about these stories—all available evidence suggests the dead don’t care about much—it seems that if we tell them often enough, and listen carefully to the stories of others, our knowledge of the dead can deepen and grow. If we persist in this process, digging and sifting, we had better be prepared for hard truths; like rocks beneath the surface of a plowed field, they show themselves eventually.
Philip Connors Lapham's Quarterly Dec 2011 15min Permalink
Dead of an accidental overdose at 28, Derek Boogaard rose from Western Canada’s rugged youth leagues to become on of Hockey’s most feared pugilists. Along the way, what happened to his brain?
John Branch New York Times Dec 2011 40min Permalink
The story of a sheriff’s deputy in Minnesota who took his own life.
"If anything happens to me," Ruettimann said, "give this to the reporter." After Ruettimann's death, Hereaux took the file down off his desk. Inside was a thick stack of loose-leaf documents, a manila folder stuffed with letters, and a catalog-size clasp envelope labeled "Reports." Written in black permanent marker in the margin of the envelope was the reporter's name: mine.
Jessica Lussenhop City Pages Nov 2011 15min Permalink
One student’s struggle, and the lawsuit that could put an end to a controversial “neutrality policy” in the Minnesota school district.
Jessica Lussenhop City Pages Sep 2011 10min Permalink
As divided families argued over whether to stay or go, Jones saw part of his congregation slipping away. Al Simon, father of three, wanted to take his children back to America. "No! No! No!" screamed his wife. Someone whispered to her: "Don't worry, we're going to take care of everything." Indeed, as reporters learned later from survivors, Jones had a plan to plant one or more fake defectors among the departing group, in order to attack them. He told some of his people that the Congressman's plane "will fall out of the sky."
The last days of Spalding Gray.
Alex Williams New York Feb 2004 25min Permalink
A bridge, a preventable leap, and the politics of barriers for “suicide hotspots.”
Matthieu Aikins The Coast Jan 2008 25min Permalink
The demise of an NFL player.
Gus Garcia-Roberts The Miami New Times Apr 2011 20min Permalink
“One evening, my home phone rang. ‘You have a collect call from Bernard Madoff, an inmate at a federal prison,’ a recording announced. And there he was.”
Steve Fishman New York Mar 2011 30min Permalink
On the suicide of a promising professional golfer.
You watch your best friend jump off a bridge trying to end his life. What do you do? Vino Richemond jumped in after him.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Oct 2010 Permalink
Li Dao, a young Minnesota nurse, appeared in suicide chat rooms, contacted the most desperate, and made pacts to die with them via webcam. After some in the forum caught on, Dao disappeared; or rather, Dao had never existed at all. She was a middle-aged man. And he may have encouraged and witnessed dozens of live suicides.
Nadya Labi GQ Oct 2010 25min Permalink
The story of two Canadian artificial intelligence visionaries who became bitter rivals and then both committed suicide in the same month.
David Kushner Wired Feb 2008 Permalink
The managing editor’s suicide has received extensive press coverage, in part because the story appeared to be a relatively simple one: his boss was a bully. It was more complicated than that.
Emily Bazelon Slate Sep 2010 Permalink
The story of a deadly collision on the D.C. Metro, told from surviving passengers’ point of view.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Jun 2009 10min Permalink
What happens to a subway operator after someone commits suicide by jumping in front of his train?
Rachel Giese Toronto Life Aug 2010 Permalink
A prominent sportswriter spent his life wanting to be a woman and, to great public attention, made the gender switch. But his change brought regret, and eventual suicide.
Steve Friess LA Weekly Aug 2010 25min Permalink
When one of the best young chemists in the world took his own life, Harvard was forced to reconsider the relationship between PhD students and their (often Nobel Prize-winning) advisers.
Stephen S. Hall New York Times Magazine Nov 1998 25min Permalink
Her suicide made headlines around the world after classmates were indicted on felony charges related to bullying. The real story isn’t that simple.
Emily Bazelon Slate Jul 2010 15min Permalink
Dozens of young adults in rural Wales are hanging themselves, feeding an epidemic of copycat suicides that experts are have been unable to contain.
Alex Shoumatoff Vanity Fair Feb 2009 25min Permalink
On January 1st, 2011, the U.S. estate tax will jump from zero to around 50%, which gives a lot of very rich elders (or perhaps more accurately, their heirs) millions of dollars in incentive to expedite death.
April Savino, a teenage homeless runaway, lived in Grand Central Terminal from 1984 until 1987 when she committed suicide on the steps of a nearby church.
Dennis Hevesi New York Times Oct 1988 20min Permalink
The nation watched live as Robert O’Donnell rescued Baby Jessica from that well in Texas in October, 1987. Then they stopped watching, and Robert O’Donnell was lost without the attention.
Lisa Belkin New York Times Magazine Jul 1995 30min Permalink
The fatal allure of the Golden Gate Bridge and why it doesn’t have a barrier to thwart potential leapers.
Tad Friend New Yorker Oct 2003 20min Permalink