|
|||||||||||||||||||
MOST READ
|
A Year Later, Tara Reade Works to Correct the RecordRyan GrimAn attorney for Tara Reade has approached a swath of media outlets demanding they correct a claim that she lied about graduating from college.
|
CIA Headquarters Got Vaccinated in Early January, Rankling Intelligence Officers AbroadKen Klippenstein“Nobody gives a shit about the overseas workforce,” a former CIA officer complained.
|
Protecting freedom of the press has never been more important. Be the next person to support The Intercept’s independent journalism by becoming a member today.Top Stories
|
Feeble Pandemic Protections at Private Texas Prison Leave People Fearing Death Behind BarsFelipe De La HozPeople incarcerated at a Texas federal prison describe multiple health hazards, including a careless response to the coronavirus.
|
Inside Gab, the Online Safe Space for Far-Right ExtremistsMicah LeeThe hacked data from Gab contains 65 gigabytes of data, including 4 million Gab accounts, 31,000 groups, and 39 million posts.
|
Missouri Prosecutors Lack the Power to Right a Wrongful ConvictionJordan SmithProsecutor Kim Gardner agrees that Lamar Johnson is innocent, but the state’s top court says there’s nothing she can do about it.
|
Cuomo’s “Women’s Equality Party” Might Just Be the Most Cynical Political Move of His CareerRyan GrimCuomo deployed the “WEP” to back male machine candidates over women with a real shot at winning.
|
Private Companies Maneuvering to Cash In on Biden’s Child Migrant DetentionJohn WashingtonTwo of the firms poised to vie for new lucrative child-detention contracts have checkered pasts in migrant detention.
|
Brazil’s Lula Launches Comeback — as the Judge Who Locked Him Up Falls From GraceAlexandre de Santi, Rafael Moro MartinsBy ending Lula’s political ban and trying the ex-judge Sergio Moro for bias, the Supreme Court shook up Brazilian politics.
|
Women’s Safety Movement Sparked by Sarah Everard’s Murder Should Focus More on Cops and the HomeNatasha LennardDiscussions of “stranger danger” can obscure the structures of gendered power, including state and domestic violence.
|