When Doctors Feel Pain After a Medical Mistake
by Blair HickmanDr. David Ring, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and board certified orthopedic and hand surgeon, once performed the wrong surgery on a patient’s finger. Ring quickly...
View ArticleManti Te’o Was Involved in Three Hoaxes: MuckReads Podcast
by Mike Webb On Friday, Jan. 25, ProPublica reporter Marshall Allen interviewed Timothy Burke and Jack Dickey — the Deadspin reporters who first broke the Manti Te'o hoax. Their story, "Manti Te'o's...
View ArticleThe Best Reporting on Redistricting Shenanigans (#MuckReads)
by Christie Thompson and Theodoric MeyerRepublicans in the Virginia Senate made headlines Jan. 20 when they rammed through legislation that would concentrate the state’s Democratic voters into fewer...
View ArticleTimeline: How Obama Compares to Bush on Torture, Surveillance and Detention
by Cora Currier and Lena Groeger
View ArticleNew Report Calls for More Grants to Low-Income Students, End to Federal...
by Marian WangThe federal government must double down on grants to low-income students and dramatically simplify the system of student loans, says a new report by the non-partisan New America...
View ArticleObama’s Flip-Flops on Money in Politics: A Brief History
by Justin ElliottWhen President Obama told supporters that he would morph his campaign into a new nonprofit that would accept unlimited corporate donations, the announcement set off a familiar round...
View ArticleLawmakers Press for Answers on Sale of Wild Horses
by Dave Philipps, Special to ProPublica Two congressmen wrote to the Department of Interior this week to demand information on the progress of its investigation into whether more than 1,700 federally...
View ArticleDo As We Say, Congress Says, Then Does What It Wants
by Theodoric MeyerWhen CBS News reported in 2011 that members of Congress weren’t prohibited from insider trading, Congress moved swiftly.President Obama signed a law banning it within six months of...
View ArticleHow Disaster Aid Recipients Voted on Sandy Relief
by Al Shaw and Jeff LarsonThough the Sandy relief bill passed both the Senate and the House, many members of Congress voted no despite their own states receiving millions of dollars in federal...
View ArticleCensorship Controversy Interrupts Trial of Gitmo Detainees
by Cora CurrierWhen a pretrial hearing for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and four other alleged 9/11 plotters began this week, an unknown censor shut off the audio feed from the courtroom even though no...
View ArticleFeds to Publicize Drug and Device Company Payments to Doctors Next Year
by Charles Ornstein and Tracy WeberUpdate, Feb. 1, 2013: This story has been updated. After years of anticipation, all of the nation's drug and medical device makers must soon begin publicly reporting...
View ArticleA Patient’s Guide: How To Stay Safe In a Hospital
by Blair HickmanPropping up a patient’s hospital bed at a 30-degree angle can help prevent hospital-acquired pneumonia. Using alcohol wipes kills staph bugs, but you need bleach wipes to kill C. diff...
View ArticleUpdate: State Oil and Gas Regulators Still Spread Thin
by Abrahm Lustgarten The U.S. relies on state and federal regulators to make sure that oil and gas drilling is done safely, and that trillions of gallons of toxic waste injected into underground...
View ArticleWill Democrats Sell Your Political Opinions to Credit Card Companies?
by Lois Beckett For years, state Democratic parties have been gathering information about individual voters' political leanings. They have noted down the opinions voters shared with canvassers — which...
View ArticleShadow War: Hezbollah’s Hand Seen In Bombing of Israeli Bus
by Sebastian Rotella Bulgaria's announcement today that investigators suspect Hezbollah in last summer's terrorist bombing against Israeli tourists on the Bulgarian coast ratchets up a conflict...
View ArticleDrone Strikes Test Legal Grounds for War on Terror
by Cora CurrierIn his second inaugural address, President Barack Obama declared that “a decade of war is now ending.” White House press secretary Jay Carney later said there was “no question” that the...
View ArticleTaiwan Drops Lobbying Firm in Wake of Congressional Ethics Probe
by Justin ElliottTaiwan has terminated its with contract a lobbying firm whose role organizing a trip to the country for a Democratic congressman prompted an ongoing House ethics investigation. House...
View ArticleIraq War Contractor Fined for Late Reports of 30 Deaths
by T. Christian MillerThe U.S. Department of Labor has fined a private security contractor $75,000 for failing to file timely reports on the deaths of workers in Iraq as required by law. The Sandi...
View ArticleEthics Probe: Congressman’s Taiwan Trip Likely Broke the Law
by Justin ElliottA congressional ethics investigation into a Democratic representative’s trip to Taiwan found “substantial reason to believe” the trip violated federal law because it was paid for by...
View ArticleHow the Supreme Court Could Scuttle Critical Fair Housing Rule
by Nikole Hannah-JonesUPDATE: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development issued the final rule (PDF) on disparate impact under the Fair Housing Act today. In doing so, the agency formalized...
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