NPR News Investigations
Recent Reports
Baton Rouge's Corroded, Overpolluting Neighbor: Exxon Mobil
()The Standard Heights neighborhood sits next to the nation's second-largest gasoline refinery. Recently, residents learned a new truth about the plumes of exhaust they see every day: Exxon Mobil's aging refinery and petrochemical facilities — like many others — are pumping out far more pollution than the law allows.
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If you have solid tips or documents on stories we should probe, please submit them to NPR's investigative team.
Major NPR News Investigations
Unlike what you see on CSI, many suspicious deaths aren't properly investigated.
Latest Stories

Former Prisoner Secures His Freedom By Admitting To A Felony
A man who was freed after nine years in prison pleads to a lesser crime to avoid another trial. (Jan. 4, 2013)
A program aimed at finding terrorism threats is entangling ordinary citizens with police and FBI.
Latest Stories

Mall Counterterrorism Files ID Mostly Minorities
Two-thirds of the people stopped at the Mall of America were minorities, activity reports show. (Sept. 8, 2011)
Nearly 700 Native American children in South Dakota are being removed from their homes every year.
Latest Stories

South Dakota Tribes Accuse State Of Violating Indian Welfare Act
They delivered a report to Congress; several lawmakers are demanding action. (Feb. 6, 2013)
There's been a quiet revolution in the way people with disabilities get long-term health care.
Latest Stories

Katie Beckett Defied The Odds, Helped Other Disabled Kids Live Longer
Katie Beckett, 34, died Friday morning in the same hospital where she once made history. (May 21, 2012)
NPR and ProPublica investigate how drugmakers select doctors to promote their products.
Latest Stories
Doctors Often Receive Payments From Drug Companies
A Pro Publica investigation finds many doctors are paid by companies whose medicines they prescribe. (Sept. 13, 2011)
NPR and the Center for Public Integrity examine colleges' failure to protect women from campus rape.
Latest Stories

Colleges, Universities Told To Do More To Prevent Sexual Assaults
The announcement follows problems uncovered by NPR and the Center for Public Integrity. (April 4, 2011)
It will cost taxpayers $9 billion this year to house inmates too poor to post bail as little as $50.
Latest Stories

Bondsman Lobby Targets Pretrial Release Programs
The effort to gut a pretrial release program in Florida is a model for squashing them nationwide. (Jan. 22, 2010)
Exploring the life and path of the Nigerian man accused in attempting to blow up a U.S. airplane.
Latest Stories
Going Radical: NPR Investigates Abdulmutallab
NPR spent weeks investigating the life and eventual radicalization of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. (Feb. 22, 2010)
Toxic air pollution persists in hundreds of U.S. communities.
Latest Stories

Gizmo Uses Lung Cells To Sniff Out Health Hazards In Urban Air
The portable device measures distress signals the cells send out in response to smog. (May 31, 2013)
Coverage of mine safety and what led to a blast that killed 29 in West Virginia.
Latest Stories

Doctors Confirm Black Lung In Victims Of Mine Blast
Evidence of a resurgence of black lung raises concerns about miners' exposure to coal dust. (May 17, 2013)
An NPR and ProPublica investigation has uncovered the military's failure to treat thousands.
Latest Stories

Once Denied A Purple Heart, A Soldier Gets Her Medal
Michelle Dyarman says that finally receiving the award means she's no longer "left behind." (Sept. 3, 2012)
Unused dollar coins, worth $1 billion, have been piling up in Federal Reserve vaults.
Latest Stories

Dollar Coins Are Done
A small number will continue to be minted, but the coins will no longer be put into circulation. (Dec. 13, 2011)
A reunion of the crew and passengers of a small U.S. Navy fleet that rescued Vietnamese refugees.
Latest Stories

Book Award Winner's Tale Echoes Those Told By Other Vietnamese Refugees
Thanhha Lai's novel, <em>Inside Out & Back Again</em>, conveys the wonders of being rescued in 1975. (Nov. 29, 2011)
Confidential informants have helped solve major cases, but sometimes, things can go terribly wrong.
Latest Stories

Retired Drug Informant Says He Was Burned
After Ernesto Gamboa helped U.S. prosecutors get nearly 100 convictions, ICE moved to deport him. (Feb. 13, 2010)
Other Key Stories
Private Prisons
- Town Relies On Troubled Youth Prison For Profits
- Private Prison Promises Leave Texas Towns In Trouble
Guantamo North
- 'Guantanamo North': Inside Secretive U.S. Prisons
- Leaving 'Guantanamo North'
- DATA: Population Of The Communications Management Units
Air Safety
Cold Cases
Arizona Immigration Law
Mexico Drug War
- Mexico's Drug War: A Rigged Fight?
- Mexico Seems to Favor Sinaloa Cartel in Drug War
- On The Trail Of Mexico's Vicious Sinaloa Cartel
- Reported Cartel Bribnes of Mexican Pubic Officials
Oil Spill
- Rig Blast Survivor: 'I Thought I Was Going To Die'
- Blast Survivors Kept Isolated On Gulf For Hours
- Key Events That Led To Deepwater Blowout
- Rig Survivors Felt Coerced To Sign Waivers
Militia
Unintended Acceleration
more NPR News Investigations >



