“That Guy Is Still Out There”

Five years after Anthony Broadwater was belatedly cleared for the sexual assault of Alice Sebold, the questions of how he came to be wrongly convicted and how one or more serial rapists operated for years with little consequence have only deepened.

To Protect Its Drinking Water, This City Has to Appeal to the Oil Regulators That Put It at Risk

Oklahoma restricts oil field wastewater injection within a half-mile of public water wells. Regulators have let companies do it anyway. But in the city of Enid, officials are pushing back against one of the state’s biggest industries.

Trump’s DOJ Said Police Reform Was “Factually Unjustified. ” A New Report Shows Otherwise.

Police forces with records of unconstitutional policing continued to engage in excessive force even as the Trump administration declared federal oversight unnecessary, according to a new yearlong review by the ACLU.

Florida Is Executing Prisoners at a Record Pace, Even as Most of the U. S. Abandons the Death Penalty

Early last year, Gov. Ron DeSantis began signing death warrants at a faster rate than ever before. What followed was the most intense period of executions the state has carried out in more than eight decades.

Socialists Are Surging. In Colorado, a 29-Year Incumbent Is Sweating.

Democratic Rep. Diana DeGette didn’t take Melat Kiros seriously. Now she’s scrambling to convince Colorado voters she’s still the progressive pick.

Women in the Army Are More Likely to Be Killed by Fellow Soldiers Than Enemy Combatants

A first-of-its-kind investigation by The Intercept found that the greatest threats to women serving in the Army come at the hands of male soldiers.

Is Washington Endorsing Family Rule in Libya?

The United States should heed its own track record of backing individuals in conflict-affected states.

Iranian Elites Are Not in Agreement About What to Do Next

If the United States wants the cease-fire to last, it needs to take Tehran’s politics seriously.