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Coming Thursday: How an Acclaimed American Charity Failed Some of the World’s Most Vulnerable Girls

More Than Me gained fame for saving girls from sexual exploitation. But from the very beginning, girls were being raped.

Katie Meyler captivated Americans with the stories of girls she met in Monrovia, Liberia, who she said were so poor that they had to sell their bodies just to buy clean drinking water. Her social media followers gave her money to send them to school. She started a charity called More Than Me, and in 2012 she won $1 million live on NBC to build a school of her own.

Her charity was created to save these vulnerable girls from sexual exploitation. But from the very beginning, girls were being raped by a man Meyler trusted. He was a former child soldier, the charity’s first staff member and, at one point, Meyler’s lover. After a yearlong ProPublica investigation, reporter Finlay Young delves into the question of who is responsible when those who help also cause enduring and irreversible harm.

The story and an accompanying documentary will publish on Oct. 11, in partnership with Time magazine. Sign up below and we'll email it to you when it goes live.

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