Washington Monthly InvestigationEnvironment Beauty Tips for the FDA Did my wife’s cosmetics give her breast cancer? Inside a regulatory disaster zone. John WasikWashington MonthlyMay 6, 2013 InvestigationImmigration, Politics Over the Line Why are US Border Patrol agents shooting into Mexico and killing innocent civilians? John Carlos FreyWashington MonthlyMay 6, 2013 InvestigationJustice How We Train Our Cops to Fear Islam There aren’t nearly enough counterterrorism experts to instruct all of America’s police. So we got these guys instead. Meg Stalcup & Joshua CrazeWashington MonthlyMarch 2, 2011 InvestigationEnvironment, Politics Against the Grain President Obama supports billions of dollars in ethanol subsidies, arguing in part that it boosts rural economies. But the evidence shows it only benefits large-scale industrial production and cornbelt politicians — not local American farmers. Heather RogersWashington MonthlyOctober 26, 2010 InvestigationJustice DNA’s Dirty Little Secret DNA is known for its ability to exonerate the innocent. But the use of degraded DNA in cold cases may actually be putting many innocent people in prison. Michael BobelianWashington MonthlyFebruary 24, 2010
InvestigationEnvironment Beauty Tips for the FDA Did my wife’s cosmetics give her breast cancer? Inside a regulatory disaster zone. John WasikWashington MonthlyMay 6, 2013
InvestigationImmigration, Politics Over the Line Why are US Border Patrol agents shooting into Mexico and killing innocent civilians? John Carlos FreyWashington MonthlyMay 6, 2013
InvestigationJustice How We Train Our Cops to Fear Islam There aren’t nearly enough counterterrorism experts to instruct all of America’s police. So we got these guys instead. Meg Stalcup & Joshua CrazeWashington MonthlyMarch 2, 2011
InvestigationEnvironment, Politics Against the Grain President Obama supports billions of dollars in ethanol subsidies, arguing in part that it boosts rural economies. But the evidence shows it only benefits large-scale industrial production and cornbelt politicians — not local American farmers. Heather RogersWashington MonthlyOctober 26, 2010
InvestigationJustice DNA’s Dirty Little Secret DNA is known for its ability to exonerate the innocent. But the use of degraded DNA in cold cases may actually be putting many innocent people in prison. Michael BobelianWashington MonthlyFebruary 24, 2010