A reporter turned on the audio recording as Kirstjen Nielsen defended the Trump administration’s immigration policies at a White House briefing.
ProPublica
At a killer’s sentencing, Native Americans talk of healing and enduring suspicions
A man in Washington state got 7 1/2 years for a killing some said was fueled by hate.
Justice Department to give financial boost to FBI’s violent crime database
The infusion of money for the FBI’s Violent Criminal Apprehension Program comes after ProPublica reported on shortcomings in the use of a database meant to assist in capturing serial killers and rapists.
Want to lower health care costs? Stop wasting our money.
ProPublica documented the many ways waste is baked into our health care system, from destroying perfectly good medication to junking brand new supplies. Eliminating the waste could insure millions of Americans.
The White House says it doesn’t keep a list of Mar-a-Lago visitors. Experts and visitors are skeptical.
Seven members and guests of Mar-a-Lago say the U.S. Secret Service checks names of visitors. Access to the president can be bought for $200,000 a year through a membership. This money flows into the Trump Organization, enriching the president.
Amid opioid crisis, insurers restrict pricey, less addictive painkillers
Drug companies and doctors have been accused of fueling the opioid crisis, but some question whether insurers have played a role, too.
How Jeff Sessions misrepresented the Trump administration’s expansion of military supplies for police
The attorney general mischaracterized Obama-era restrictions while citing a study that actually says new computers reduce crime more than heavy weapons do.
Can police prevent the next Charlottesville?
“We saw it coming,” said a Virginia officer, but they couldn’t stop it. Still, law enforcement experts say measures can be taken — even when protesters are armed.
Trump’s expected pick for top USDA scientist is not a scientist
Sam Clovis is likely to be named undersecretary of the USDA department that manages research on everything from climate change to nutrition.
Focus on infants during childbirth leaves U.S. moms in danger
The U.S. has the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world: Sixty percent of the 700 to 900 deaths each year are preventable, including that of neonatal nurse Lauren Bloomstein.