New York Times Magazine InvestigationWorld How One of the Most Stable Nations in West Africa Descended Into Mayhem Burkina Faso once looked like a success story for U.S. military aid. But now it’s contending with a growing insurgency, an unfolding humanitarian crisis — and a security force targeting civilians. Nick TurseNew York Times MagazineOctober 15, 2020 InvestigationHealth, Immigration, Justice Fear, Illness and Death in ICE Detention: How a Protest Grew on the Inside Detained men and women held at a facility in Georgia are trying desperately to raise the alarm. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineJune 4, 2020 InvestigationJustice Broken Justice in the 42 In the poorest congressional district in the country, where thousands of people are arrested each year, one former cop with a complicated past has made high-profile prosecutions fall apart. Saki KnafoNew York Times MagazineJanuary 23, 2019 InvestigationImmigration Is Denaturalization the Next Front in Trump’s War on Immigration? The prosecution of naturalized United States citizens is a sign of a gathering storm. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineDecember 19, 2018 InvestigationJustice The Coast Guard’s ‘Floating Guantánamos’ U.S. Coast Guard is shackling low-level smugglers on ships for weeks in international waters. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineNovember 20, 2017 InvestigationBusiness, Politics Who Benefits From the Expansion of AP Classes? Testing companies are raking in millions of federal and state dollars on increasing classes in low-income majority black and Latino high schools. Alina TugendNew York Times MagazineSeptember 7, 2017 InvestigationJustice The Education of Edwin Raymond He thought he could change the New York Police Department from the inside. He wound up the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit. Saki KnafoNew York Times MagazineFebruary 18, 2016 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 InvestigationBusiness The Hard Lessons of Mobile Home U. 1) Raise the rent often. 2) No coin laundry. 3) Don’t be a slumlord. Gary RivlinNew York Times MagazineMarch 13, 2014
InvestigationWorld How One of the Most Stable Nations in West Africa Descended Into Mayhem Burkina Faso once looked like a success story for U.S. military aid. But now it’s contending with a growing insurgency, an unfolding humanitarian crisis — and a security force targeting civilians. Nick TurseNew York Times MagazineOctober 15, 2020
InvestigationHealth, Immigration, Justice Fear, Illness and Death in ICE Detention: How a Protest Grew on the Inside Detained men and women held at a facility in Georgia are trying desperately to raise the alarm. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineJune 4, 2020
InvestigationJustice Broken Justice in the 42 In the poorest congressional district in the country, where thousands of people are arrested each year, one former cop with a complicated past has made high-profile prosecutions fall apart. Saki KnafoNew York Times MagazineJanuary 23, 2019
InvestigationImmigration Is Denaturalization the Next Front in Trump’s War on Immigration? The prosecution of naturalized United States citizens is a sign of a gathering storm. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineDecember 19, 2018
InvestigationJustice The Coast Guard’s ‘Floating Guantánamos’ U.S. Coast Guard is shackling low-level smugglers on ships for weeks in international waters. Seth Freed WesslerNew York Times MagazineNovember 20, 2017
InvestigationBusiness, Politics Who Benefits From the Expansion of AP Classes? Testing companies are raking in millions of federal and state dollars on increasing classes in low-income majority black and Latino high schools. Alina TugendNew York Times MagazineSeptember 7, 2017
InvestigationJustice The Education of Edwin Raymond He thought he could change the New York Police Department from the inside. He wound up the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit. Saki KnafoNew York Times MagazineFebruary 18, 2016
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
InvestigationBusiness The Hard Lessons of Mobile Home U. 1) Raise the rent often. 2) No coin laundry. 3) Don’t be a slumlord. Gary RivlinNew York Times MagazineMarch 13, 2014