Featured Stories
The FTC Is Investigating Intuit Over TurboTax Practices
The probe, spurred by ProPublica reporting, centers on whether Intuit tricked customers into paying for tax filing when they should have been able to file for free.
Please Tell Us If You Have Any Trouble Voting This Year
Are you a voter? A poll worker? An election administrator? We want to hear from you about any problems you’re experiencing or witnessing in the voting process.
Sent Home to Die
In New Orleans, hospitals sent patients infected with the coronavirus into hospice facilities or back to their families to die at home, in some cases discontinuing treatment even as relatives begged them to keep trying.
In New Orleans, hospitals sent patients infected with the coronavirus into hospice facilities or back to their families to die at home, in some cases discontinuing treatment even as relatives begged them to keep trying.
What Can Mayors Do When the Police Stop Doing Their Jobs?
In cities across the country, leaders face a phenomenon encountered in Baltimore and Chicago: officers slowing their work in the wake of high-profile episodes of police violence. Reporter Alec MacGillis asks: Will the result be different this time?
In cities across the country, leaders face a phenomenon encountered in Baltimore and Chicago: officers slowing their work in the wake of high-profile episodes of police violence. Reporter Alec MacGillis asks: Will the result be different this time?
Featured Reporting on the Crisis
America Doesn’t Have a Coherent Strategy for Asymptomatic Testing. It Needs One.
While it battles a virus that can spread quickly via silent carriers, the United States has yet to execute a strategy for testing asymptomatic people. This is a problem — and ProPublica health reporter Caroline Chen explains why.
The Loan Company That Sued Thousands of Low-Income Latinos During the Pandemic
A monthslong investigation revealed that Oportun Inc., which was founded to help Latino immigrants build credit, routinely uses lawsuits to intimidate a vulnerable population into keeping up with high-interest loan payments — even amid COVID-19.
ProPublica Announces Six Staff Promotions, Creates New Masthead Team
A Doctor Went to His Own Employer for a COVID-19 Antibody Test. It Cost $10,984.
Facebook’s Political Ad Ban Also Threatens Ability to Spread Accurate Information on How to Vote
Electionland 2020: Mail Ballot Challenges, Election Security, New Legislation and More
As Trump Calls for Law and Order, Can Chicago’s Top Prosecutor Beat the Charge That She’s Soft on Crime?
Oregon Governor Calls for Audit After Our Reporting on State Institute That Lobbied for Timber Industry
The Oregon Forest Resources Institute worked to undercut academic research and acted as a lobbying and public relations arm for the timber industry.
New Engineering Report Finds Privately Built Border Wall Will Fail
Reporting Recipe: How to Report on Voting by Mail
The Trump Administration Is Backing Out of a $647 Million Ventilator Deal After ProPublica Investigated the Price
America Doesn’t Have a Coherent Strategy for Asymptomatic Testing. It Needs One.
Now in Government Food Aid Boxes: A Letter From Donald Trump
How We Found Out How Many Debt Collection Lawsuits Oportun Inc. Filed During the Pandemic
The Loan Company That Sued Thousands of Low-Income Latinos During the Pandemic
Hand-Picked Mentors and Networking: Apply for ProPublica’s 2020 Diversity Mentorship Program at ONA
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