
The high court lets stand the findings of lower courts that the strict Texas ID measure discriminated against minorities.
We’re relaunching a service that lets you make notifications when some key real-world things happen in Washington.
Thousands of potential victims. Years of delay. Now, action in cases involving a corrupt crime lab chemist.
Four former employees say that Wells Fargo made clients in its Los Angeles region pay for missing deadlines to lock in interest rates on loans, even though the delays were the bank’s fault.
DOJ lawyers look to adjourn a hearing next week, and some expect them to wind up abandoning their argument that the Texas voter ID law discriminates against minorities.
If you see something, say something. ProPublica is eager to get tips on shifts in available government information related to climate change.
To transfer control of his companies, the president has to submit filings in Florida, Delaware and New York. We spoke to officials in each of those states.
As President Trump takes office, we’re sharing what many of our reporters are digging into.
As promised, President Trump kept it short, and largely avoided lofty language.
Podcast: The 1962 murder of Mary Horton was one of the oldest cold cases in U.S. history. Then reporter Jerry Mitchell started digging into it.
If Republicans succeed in repealing the estate tax, Rex Tillerson, Gary Cohn, Wilbur Ross, Jared Kushner, Steve Mnuchin, Betsy DeVos and their heirs may be able to defer capital gains taxes forever.
After hearing from a company whose CEO was a campaign contributor, a congressional aide to Donald Trump’s HHS nominee repeatedly pushed a federal health agency to remove a critical drug study from its website.
We’re investigating algorithmic injustice and the formulas that increasingly influence our lives.
24 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Bias in Criminal Risk Scores Is Mathematically Inevitable, Researchers Say
The suit filed by ProPublica and the Virginian-Pilot claims the VA has stonewalled in response to requests for documents, including those sent and received by David Shulkin, the president-elect’s pick to be VA secretary.
A commission established by lawmakers to help end the conviction of the innocent says field tests are too unreliable to be trusted without lab confirmation.
Houston is the fourth-largest city in the country. It’s home to the nation’s largest refining and petrochemical complex, where billions of gallons of oil and dangerous chemicals are stored. And it’s a sitting duck for the next big hurricane. Why isn’t Texas ready?
9 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Obama Signs Bill That May Boost Texas Hurricane Protection Study
Our series seeks to show how politics and government really work, and why they don’t.
53 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Conservatives Plot Their Course on the Rising ‘Sea of Red’ in State Capitals
ProPublica is covering access to the ballot and problems that prevent people from exercising their right to vote during the 2016 election.
8 Stories in the Series. Latest:
N.C. Governor Loses Re-Election Bid, Attempts to Hold Power by Claiming Voter Fraud
An 18-year-old said she was attacked at knifepoint. Then she said she made it up. That’s where our story begins.
6 Stories in the Series. Latest:
ProPublica is exploring New York City’s broken rent stabilization system, the tax breaks that underpin it, the regulators who look the other way and the tenants who suffer as a result.
30 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Why Developers of Manhattan Luxury Towers Give Millions to Upstate Candidates
How one of the country’s most venerated charities has failed disaster victims, broken promises and made dubious claims of success.
38 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Red Cross ‘Failed for 12 Days’ After Historic Louisiana Floods