Year in Review 2018
Innocence Is No Defense: The Intercept’s 2018 Justice Coverage
Investigations into wrongful convictions and the death penalty were joined this year by important work on predictive policing, voting rights, and #MeToo.
Year in Review 2018
Investigations into wrongful convictions and the death penalty were joined this year by important work on predictive policing, voting rights, and #MeToo.
Year in Review 2018
Surveillance and spying have been recurring themes; influence-peddling has been rampant, with Saudi Arabia and its allies cozying up to the administration.
Year in Review 2018
This will likely go down as the year when technology, once envisioned as an equalizing force, finally went headlong down the path toward dystopia.
Tune in to our live election night special, in collaboration with Democracy Now.
The War on Immigrants
Si usted conoce a alguien que ha sido impactado por “tolerancia cero,” nosotros queremos saber.
The War on Immigrants
We are partnering with other news organizations to gather vital information about the children in immigration detention centers and shelters.
James Risen speaks to Jeremy Scahill about the challenges of exposing national security stories unfolding in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.
We published some 1,400 stories in 2017, shining a light on abuses and corruption from Washington, D.C., to the foreign battlefields of the war on terror.
On June 5 The Intercept published a story about a top-secret NSA document that was provided to us completely anonymously.
We were horrified to learn this morning that Juan Thompson, a former employee of The Intercept, has been arrested in connection with bomb threats against Jewish targets.
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