The Intercept InvestigationEnvironment, Politics Defanged Money and politics could doom the Florida panther — and the Endangered Species Act. Jimmy TobiasThe InterceptJanuary 24, 2021 InvestigationImmigration, Justice The El Paso Experiment A public defender's lonely fight against family separation. Melissa del BosqueThe InterceptNovember 1, 2020 InvestigationJustice, Politics Federal Prosecutors Engaged in Unprecedented Push to Jail Protesters Before Trial Shamar Betts has been detained since June for a provocative flyer he posted on Facebook amid protests over the killing of George Floyd. Aaron Miguel CantúThe InterceptOctober 30, 2020 InvestigationBusiness The Fintech Debt Trap Aggressive online lenders are preying on desperate borrowers and could trigger a new consumer financial crisis. Alyssa KatzThe InterceptAugust 30, 2020 InvestigationJustice, Politics Trump Comes Up Empty When Pressed for Evidence of Election Fraud in Court The Trump campaign’s 524-page response to a discovery demand turned up precisely zero instances of mail-in vote fraud. Richard SalameThe InterceptAugust 20, 2020 InvestigationHealth, Immigration, World Exporting the Virus How Trump’s Deportation Flights Are Putting Latin America and the Caribbean at Risk. Melissa del Bosque & Isabel MacdonaldThe InterceptJune 26, 2020 InvestigationJustice, Politics As States Struggle With Vote-by-Mail, “Many Thousands, If Not Millions” of Ballots Could Go Uncounted in November The coronavirus pandemic has spurred states to boost vote-by-mail, raising worries that inconsistent policies could lead to problems counting mailed ballots. Richard SalameThe InterceptJune 18, 2020 InvestigationBusiness, Health They Were Warned Not to Take Sick Days — Then Six Workers at Their Warehouse Died of Coronavirus The workers also expressed concerns that delays in the provision of personal protective equipment like masks and gloves made an outbreak inevitable. Gabriel ThompsonThe InterceptApril 30, 2020 InvestigationBusiness, Health, Labor As Coronavirus Spread, Financial Services Contractor Told Warehouse Workers They Aren’t Allowed to Get Sick In a Long Island warehouse, immigrants work long hours doing mailings for a multibillion-dollar financial services company. Now they’re getting sick. Gabriel ThompsonThe InterceptApril 7, 2020 InvestigationBusiness, Environment, Justice, Politics Paid by the Pipeline A Canadian Energy Company Bought an Oregon Sheriff's Unit Will Parrish & Alleen BrownThe InterceptFebruary 12, 2020 1 2 3 … 8
InvestigationEnvironment, Politics Defanged Money and politics could doom the Florida panther — and the Endangered Species Act. Jimmy TobiasThe InterceptJanuary 24, 2021
InvestigationImmigration, Justice The El Paso Experiment A public defender's lonely fight against family separation. Melissa del BosqueThe InterceptNovember 1, 2020
InvestigationJustice, Politics Federal Prosecutors Engaged in Unprecedented Push to Jail Protesters Before Trial Shamar Betts has been detained since June for a provocative flyer he posted on Facebook amid protests over the killing of George Floyd. Aaron Miguel CantúThe InterceptOctober 30, 2020
InvestigationBusiness The Fintech Debt Trap Aggressive online lenders are preying on desperate borrowers and could trigger a new consumer financial crisis. Alyssa KatzThe InterceptAugust 30, 2020
InvestigationJustice, Politics Trump Comes Up Empty When Pressed for Evidence of Election Fraud in Court The Trump campaign’s 524-page response to a discovery demand turned up precisely zero instances of mail-in vote fraud. Richard SalameThe InterceptAugust 20, 2020
InvestigationHealth, Immigration, World Exporting the Virus How Trump’s Deportation Flights Are Putting Latin America and the Caribbean at Risk. Melissa del Bosque & Isabel MacdonaldThe InterceptJune 26, 2020
InvestigationJustice, Politics As States Struggle With Vote-by-Mail, “Many Thousands, If Not Millions” of Ballots Could Go Uncounted in November The coronavirus pandemic has spurred states to boost vote-by-mail, raising worries that inconsistent policies could lead to problems counting mailed ballots. Richard SalameThe InterceptJune 18, 2020
InvestigationBusiness, Health They Were Warned Not to Take Sick Days — Then Six Workers at Their Warehouse Died of Coronavirus The workers also expressed concerns that delays in the provision of personal protective equipment like masks and gloves made an outbreak inevitable. Gabriel ThompsonThe InterceptApril 30, 2020
InvestigationBusiness, Health, Labor As Coronavirus Spread, Financial Services Contractor Told Warehouse Workers They Aren’t Allowed to Get Sick In a Long Island warehouse, immigrants work long hours doing mailings for a multibillion-dollar financial services company. Now they’re getting sick. Gabriel ThompsonThe InterceptApril 7, 2020
InvestigationBusiness, Environment, Justice, Politics Paid by the Pipeline A Canadian Energy Company Bought an Oregon Sheriff's Unit Will Parrish & Alleen BrownThe InterceptFebruary 12, 2020