Deadnamed
The way cops in Jacksonville and other jurisdictions investigate the murders of transgender women adds insult to injury and may be delaying justice.
What Happens When a Pipeline Runs Afoul of Government Rules? Authorities Change the Rules.
Federal authorities halted work on the massive Mountain Valley Pipeline this month after an appeals court ruled that federal agencies neglected to follow environmental protections.
Famed Houston Surgeon Updates Conflict-of-Interest Disclosures
ProPublica and the Houston Chronicle reported in May that Dr. O.H. “Bud” Frazier had often failed to disclose his payments from medical device makers in articles he authored. Since then, he’s amended his disclosures for three pieces in the New England Journal of Medicine.
“Walking While Black” Wins 3 Awards in Florida Society of News Editors Contest
The Florida Society of News Editors honored “Walking While Black,” a collaboration between ProPublica and the Florida Times-Union, with three first-place awards in its annual journalism contest.
ProPublica Wins Two NABJ Salute to Excellence Awards
Two ProPublica projects have been honored with the National Association of Black Journalists’ 2018 Salute to Excellence Awards.
When Mapping the Many Disparities in Chicago, It Can Feel Like It’s the Same Story Being Told
But maps can turn personal experiences into powerful evidence.
Have You Had Problems Changing Your Name or Gender Marker?
We’re investigating the barriers transgender and gender-nonconforming people face in changing their name or gender marker on government-issued IDs.
Election 2016 Gets a Report Card
A report out today by the MIT Election Lab finds signs of progress and evidence of protest.
Congress Works for You. Here’s How to Be a Better Boss.
Sign up to get eight personalized emails that teach you how to make a difference.
What’s the City of Chicago Doing About Its Problem With Duplicate Sticker Tickets?
Seven weeks after the city pledged to address the issue, drivers are still on the hook — and now Chicago’s ticketing practices are becoming an issue in the mayor’s race.
Democrats Vow Investigation of VA’s Shadow Rulers After ProPublica Story
“This situation reeks of corruption and cronyism,” said the top Democrat on the House veterans committee.
Have You Donated or Helped to Collect Birth Tissue?
ProPublica is seeking your help in finding out how birth tissue donated by mothers is used in research and by industry.
Ben Carson Declared Mission Accomplished in East St. Louis — Where Public Housing Is Still a Disaster
The HUD secretary came to town last year and declared residents were no longer at risk, three decades after the federal government took over public housing here. In fact, the complexes are falling apart and a woman was killed in the weeks before his visit.
Top Official at U.S. Embassy in Israel Is Owed Money From Israel Advocacy Group
An ethics expert questions why the State Department has cleared the arrangement.
We Are Expanding Our Local Reporting Network. Submit Your Best Project Ideas for Investigating State Government.
The influence of state government is far-reaching, yet elected officials and state bureaucrats are getting ever less scrutiny. Send us ideas for accountability projects by Sept. 14.
ProPublica to Expand Local Reporting Network to Focus on State Governments
In an effort to help stanch the decline in aggressive statehouse coverage across the country, ProPublica today announced that it is expanding its Local Reporting Network with a focus on accountability journalism on state governments or state politics.
What Do You Know About Public Housing in the U.S.? Help Us Investigate.
ProPublica is teaming up with The Southern Illinoisan to examine the public housing crisis in small and mid-sized cities around the country.
48 Hours in Charlottesville: Fear, Nausea, and a Sad Lack of Surprise
The violence didn’t shock me; the inaction in the face of it did.
Follow ProPublica
It’s not too late to Vote ProPublica
Donate
Awards
ProPublica was a recipient of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for public service, the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting, the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and a 2010 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting. See the full list of our awards.
Complaints & Corrections
To contact us with concerns and corrections, email us. All emails may be published unless you tell us otherwise. Read our corrections.
Featured Series
-
Trump, Inc.
Exploring the Mysteries of the President’s Businesses
Why Paul Manafort’s $15,000 Ostrich Jacket Wasn’t the Biggest Revelation as His Trial Begins — “Trump, Inc.” Podcast Extra
Two veteran reporters take listeners inside the proceedings, dissecting the trial’s opening and revealing why Manafort’s audacious defense might be doomed.
-
Documenting Hate
Tracking Hate Crimes and Bias Incidents
48 Hours in Charlottesville: Fear, Nausea, and a Sad Lack of Surprise
The violence didn’t shock me; the inaction in the face of it did.
-
Zero Tolerance
Trump’s Immigration Policy at the Border
Trabajador acusado de abusar sexualmente a ocho menores de edad en albergue para inmigrantes
Alegatos en contra de un cuidador de menores son lo último en una serie de acusaciones serias de abuso sexual en los albergues del gobierno para jóvenes inmigrantes.
-
Ignoring Innocence
The Wrongfully Convicted Forced Into Plea Deals
13 stories in the series. Latest:
Baltimore to Pay Largest Settlement in City History — $9 Million — to Man Wrongfully Convicted of Murder
Lost Mothers
Maternal Care and Preventable Deaths
New York City Launches Initiative to Eliminate Racial Disparities in Maternal Death
A Central Brooklyn hospital featured in ProPublica and NPR’s “Lost Mothers” series for its high hemorrhage rate will serve as a pilot for quality reforms.
Walking While Black
Pedestrian Enforcement and Racial Profiling
16 stories in the series. Latest:
Jacksonville Sheriff Uses Misleading Data to Defend Pedestrian Ticketing
Too Broke for Bankruptcy
How Bankruptcy Fails Those Who Need It Most
12 stories in the series. Latest:
Chicago Begins To Rethink How Bankruptcy Lawyers Get Paid
Machine Bias
Investigating Algorithmic Injustice
59 stories in the series. Latest:
Most Popular Stories
Close this overlay (search)
Close this overlay (Creative Commons)
Republish This Story for Free
Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)Thank you for your interest in republishing this story. You are are free republish it so long as you do the following:
- You can’t edit our material, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style. (For example, “yesterday” can be changed to “last week,” and “Portland, Ore.” to “Portland” or “here.”)
- If you’re republishing online, you have to link to us and to include all of the links from our story, as well as our PixelPing tag.
- You can’t sell our material separately.
- It’s okay to put our stories on pages with ads, but not ads specifically sold against our stories.
- You can’t republish our material wholesale, or automatically; you need to select stories to be republished individually.
- You cannot republish our photographs without specific permission (ask our Public Relations Director Minhee Cho if you’d like to).
- You have to credit us — ideally in the byline. We prefer “Author Name, ProPublica.”
Copy and paste the following into your page to republish:
Current site Current page