InvestigationJustice A Death Sentence in Mississippi Do prosecutors care more about a conviction than executing the right person? Spencer WoodmanViceOctober 5, 2015
NewsHealth, Justice The Teflon Toxin Goes to Court The first of 3,500 personal injury and 37 wrongful death claims against DuPont went to trial in Columbus, Ohio this week. Sharon LernerSeptember 21, 2015
InvestigationJustice The Duggars’ Ties with a Troubled Ministry The family became poster children for the Institute in Basic Life Principles, an insular evangelical ministry whose founder resigned in disgrace. Sarah PosnerTalking Points MemoSeptember 10, 2015
InvestigationHealth, Justice In Harm’s Way Seeking medical care, female Rikers inmates say they faced sexual abuse. Erika EichelbergerThe InterceptSeptember 10, 2015
ProjectWorld The World Bank’s Trail of Misery In developing countries around the globe, forest dwellers, poor villagers and other vulnerable populations claim development projects led by the World Bank — the planet’s oldest and most powerful development lender — have left a trail of misery. Sasha Chavkin, Michael W. Hudson, Ben Hallman, Cécile Schilis-Gallego & Shane ShifflettSeptember 10, 2015
InvestigationJustice World Bank Does Little for Imperiled Villagers Has the bank allowed its borrowers to crack down on critics? Bopha Phorn, Michael W. Hudson, Barry Yeoman & Ben HallmanICIJSeptember 10, 2015
InvestigationImmigration Left for Dead An undignified end for unidentified migrants in Texas. John Carlos Frey & Al LetsonRevealSeptember 8, 2015
ProjectImmigration The Deadly Checkpoint A yearlong investigation captured the intense desperation experienced by dying migrants and produced a life-saving influx of search-and-rescue agents to the region. John Carlos FreySeptember 8, 2015
BackstoryJustice The Backstory: Meaghan Winter Winter discusses tracking down sources while investigating the rise of crisis pregnancy centers in the US. Meaghan WinterAugust 26, 2015
InvestigationJustice Black and Still Underwater After Katrina One black-owned bank helped build the city’s African-American middle class — until the hurricane destroyed much more than their homes. Gary RivlinNew York Times MagazineAugust 25, 2015