A young mother rents a house near Milwaukee. The previous tenant tells her, “Baby, they shouldn’t have let you move in.”
by Raquel Rutledge, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and Ken Armstrong, ProPublica
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The judge has signed a number of no-knock search warrants that have been challenged in court, but they weren’t on file at the clerk’s office.
by Caleb Bedillion, Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
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DTE Energy has cut off power to customers more times in 2022 than in any nine-month period since the state began tracking shut-offs.
by Sarah Alvarez, Outlier Media, and Emily Hopkins, ProPublica
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Sen. Amy Klobuchar and other leading Democrats have asked the Department of Justice to examine Texas-based RealPage, which sells software to help landlords set apartment rental prices across the country.
by Heather Vogell
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Most kids labeled as having an “emotional disability” and shunted into public special education schools are Black or Latino, and low income — while wealthier families more often access a taxpayer-funded free private education.
by Abigail Kramer, THE CITY, illustrations by Holly Stapleton, special to ProPublica
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Sheltered workshops in Missouri pay disabled workers very low wages. They rarely help workers move on to higher-paying jobs.
by Madison Hopkins, The Kansas City Beacon
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A federal judge allowed the company to acquire a clearinghouse of health insurance claims. UnitedHealth says it won’t use the data to give itself an edge, even as some company documents suggest otherwise.
Cezary Podkul
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“The Medicaid program provides a safety net for our most vulnerable populations that do not have access to traditional healthcare coverage,” U.S. Attorney Juan Antonio Gonzalez said. “The misuse of Medicaid funds will not be tolerated.”
by Carol Marbin Miller, Miami Herald
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Anti-abortion groups helped write and pass laws that kicked in to ban abortion when Roe v. Wade was overturned. The groups see Tennessee’s ban as the country’s strongest — and they want to keep it that way, according to audio reviewed by ProPublica.
by Kavitha Surana
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Sheltered workshops are meant to employ disabled adults as they prepare to enter the regular workforce. In Missouri, these workers rarely graduate to higher-paying jobs.
by Madison Hopkins, The Kansas City Beacon
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Honorary consuls were meant to foster ties between countries. Accused terrorist financiers, arms traffickers and drug runners are among those who have wielded diplomatic protection, a global investigation finds.
by Debbie Cenziper, ProPublica; Will Fitzgibbon and Delphine Reuter, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists; and Eva Herscowitz and Emily Anderson Stern, Medill Investigative Lab
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