Anjali Tsui

Reporting Fellow

Photo of Anjali Tsui

Anjali Tsui is a reporting fellow at ProPublica. She covers business and consumer finance.

Prior to ProPublica, Anjali worked as a reporter for Frontline PBS, producing investigative stories in print, radio and television. In 2018, she co-produced “Separated: Children at the Border,” which was honored with a Peabody Award and served as a field producer for “The Gang Crackdown,” a documentary that was cited as part of FRONTLINE's duPont Gold Baton, the award's highest honor.

As a reporting fellow with the Global Migration Program at Columbia University, Tsui worked with a team led by New Yorker writer Sarah Stillman to unearth dozens of cases where immigrants were deported to death or irreparable harm.

Tsui began her career covering news in Asia as a producer for CNN International in Hong Kong. Her work has also appeared in The Miami Herald, The Guardian and The Philadelphia Daily News.

She graduated with honors from Columbia Graduate School for Journalism's Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism. She holds a degree in English from the University of Pennsylvania.

Utah Representative Proposes Bill to Stop Payday Lenders From Taking Bail Money from Borrowers

Debtors prisons were banned by Congress in 1833, but a ProPublica article that revealed the sweeping powers of high-interest lenders in Utah caught the attention of one legislator. Now, he’s trying to do something about it.

As the Cabinet Churns: Who’s Still Standing Among Trump’s Top Advisers

Three years into President Donald Trump’s term, the roster of his cabinet members and top advisers continues to churn at an unprecedented rate.

They Loan You Money. Then They Get a Warrant for Your Arrest.

High-interest loan companies are using Utah’s small claims courts to arrest borrowers and take their bail money. Technically, the warrants are issued for missing court hearings. For many, that’s a distinction without a difference.

How Amazon and Silicon Valley Seduced the Pentagon

Tech moguls like Jeff Bezos and Eric Schmidt have gotten unprecedented access to the Pentagon. And one whistleblower who raised flags has paid the price.

How Payday Lenders Spent $1 Million at a Trump Resort — and Cashed In

At the Trump Doral outside Miami, payday lenders celebrated the potential death of a rule intended to protect their customers. They couldn’t have done it without President Donald Trump and his latest deregulator, Kathleen Kraninger.

Tell Us What You Know About the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. We’re Investigating.

Did you file a complaint with the CFPB? Perhaps you used to work there? ProPublica and WNYC need to hear from you.

Suspected of Corruption at Home, Powerful Foreigners Find Refuge in the U.S.

Guess where politicians and businessmen fleeing criminal charges find safe haven.

Follow ProPublica

Latest Stories from ProPublica