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For 20 years, Dutch art detective Arthur Brand has acted as an intermediary between the police and people who know where stolen artwork might be hiding. He says patience and trust are everything.

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After a quarter century behind bars, he was exonerated for the 1996 crime and received the largest payout ever from New York City. But money can’t buy back all that time.

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Mysterious late-night visits, an undercover hunt for Hitler's horses, and a Picasso on the couch are business as usual for the Dutch sleuth.

"The killing of Catherine Edwards, in Beaumont, long remained unsolved. Then came Othram, a start-up whose breakthroughs in DNA technology are helping identify bodies and solve decades-old murders and rapes."

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German police have been searching for years for Jan Marsalek, who is suspected of having embezzled billions of euros through Wirecard and thought to be working as an agent for the Russian intelligence agency FSB. DER SPIEGEL tracked him down in Moscow.

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Who Killed the Fudge King?
31 Dec 2024
magazine.atavist.com

How I (possibly) solved a cold case on my summer vacation.

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My Uncle, the Hit Man
28 Nov 2024
newyorker.com

No one in my family wanted to talk about Harold’s life as a contract killer for the Mob. Then one day he called me.

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The Haunted Juror
16 Feb 2024
newyorker.com

In 1987, two innocent teen-agers went to prison for murder. Thirty-seven years later, a juror learned she got it wrong.

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The city’s homicide unit granted a year of unprecedented access to photographer Richard Sharum. His pictures tell a vivid story of cops, criminals, and victims—and the violent act that binds them together.

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A journey inside Mexico’s underground vanilla economy

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Advice from the world's greatest art thief

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After a painting by the Dutch artist sold at auction, a movie producer claimed to be the owner. It later vanished from sight, with a trail leading to Caribbean tax havens and a jailed Chinese billionaire.

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In the spring of 1961, Georges Lemay, a dapper thirty-six-year-old French Canadian, spent his days holed up in his cottage on a private island on a river in the Laurentian Mountains north of Montre…

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George Stebbins was tearing down a stone wall in the cellar of his home in Northfield, Massachusetts when he uncovered the bones. A skull emerged first, then the spine and the bones of the arms and…

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The long read: In 2016, artist César Aréchiga talked one of Mexico’s most dangerous maximum security prisons into letting him run art classes for its inmates, many of them violent gang members. Could he really change their lives?

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The crypto money-laundering market is tighter than at any time in the past decade, and the few big players are moving a “shocking” amount of currency.

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The Schwarzschild defence
22 Jan 2023
nature.com

Nature - A boost to the ratings.

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You can't make this shit up

Hacker News
23 Jun 2022
torontolife.com
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The Police Have No Reason to Help You
1 Jun 2022
newrepublic.com

Cops have been given an incredible set of legal powers immunizing them from the fatal errors of their own decisions—including their decision to do nothing in Uvalde, Texas.

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In a 1922 Post article, an ex-bootlegger offers advice for how to break into the business.

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What is the point of crypto?
17 May 2022
vox.com

Crypto is a solution in search of a problem — or problems.

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Welcome to Video’s customers thought their payments were untraceable. They couldn’t have been more wrong. The untold story of the case that shredded the myth of Bitcoin’s anonymity.

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A couple allegedly used a “laundry list” of technical measures to cover their tracks. They didn’t work.

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Cryptocurrency Is a Giant Ponzi Scheme
30 Jan 2022
jacobinmag.com

Cryptocurrency is not merely a bad investment or speculative bubble. It’s worse than that: it’s a full-on fraud.

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It was the deadliest U.S. transportation disaster in a decade. The man behind it was one of the most notorious confidential informants in FBI history.

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Cody Easterday wagered hundreds of millions of dollars on the price of beef. He lost.

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Mandy Matney kept a harsh spotlight trained on South Carolina’s Murdaugh family until they became impossible for anyone to ignore

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Death of a Lobsterman
10 Dec 2021
esquire.com

On a remote island in Maine, a group of friends thought they witnessed one man killing another with an ax. But no one was ever arrested. In a small town far out at sea, justice sometimes works a little differently.

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Cybersecurity experts tracing money paid by American businesses to Russian ransomware gangs found it led to one of Moscow’s most prestigious addresses.

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The Spine Collector
30 Nov 2021
vulture.com

For five years, a mysterious figure has been stealing books before their release. Is it espionage? Revenge? A trap? Or a complete waste of time?

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The Notorious Mrs. Mossler
28 Nov 2021
email.getpocket.com

In the mid-sixties, Candace Mossler was one of the most widely known socialites in Houston. She was in her forties, vivacious and full of charm, with wavy blond hair, deep-blue eyes, and a surgically enhanced figure that was often remarked upon in the many newspaper columns written about her.

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The Tomb Raiders of the Upper East Side
23 Nov 2021
theatlantic.com

Inside the Manhattan DA’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit

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The long read: An intrepid expert with dozens of books to his name, Stéphane Bourgoin was a bestselling author, famous in France for having interviewed more than 70 notorious murderers. Then an anonymous collective began to investigate his past

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Billed as the most secure phone on the planet, An0m became a viral sensation in the underworld. There was just one problem for anyone using it for criminal means: it was run by the police

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The Lost Boys
8 Sep 2021
texasmonthly.com

It was the most shocking crime of its day, 27 boys from the same part of town kidnapped, tortured, and killed by an affable neighbor named Dean Corll. Forty years later, it remains one of the least understood—or talked about—chapters in Houston's history.

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The Kingpin of Shanghai
26 Aug 2021
damninteresting.com

From the depths of poverty, Du Yuesheng rose through Shanghai’s underworld to become one of the most influential, and overlooked, figures in modern China.

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Conservationists saw the 6-year-old brown bear as a symbol of hope. Villagers saw him as a menace. Then he turned up dead.

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The young woman who mysteriously drowned in the Ropers Motel pool in 1966 might have remained anonymous forever, if not for cutting-edge genetics, old-fashioned genealogy—and the kindness of a small West Texas town.

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The Snitch - The Atavist Magazine
3 Jun 2021
magazine.atavist.com

In Scott Kimball, the FBI thought it had found a high-value informant who could help solve big cases. What it got instead was lies, betrayal, and murder.

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In 1974, John Patterson was abducted by the People’s Liberation Army of Mexico—a group no one had heard of before. The kidnappers wanted $500,000, and insisted that Patterson’s wife deliver the ransom.

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Huntsville station
18 Feb 2021
aeon.co

‘It’s a trip just being out’: at the local Greyhound bus station with newly released men from the Texas State Penitentiary

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Pocket - Best reads of 2020
28 Jan 2021
vox.com

Inside the distinctive, largely unknown ideology of American policing — and how it justifies racist violence.

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WHERE IS BUM FARTO
19 Jan 2021
sun-sentinel.com

In Sept. 9, 1975, William Osterhoudt, a local school principal, looked out at an implausible scene unfolding at the pink house belonging to his neighbor on United Street. Key West Fire Chief Joseph…

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John Franzese Jr. helped send his father, notorious Colombo family mobster Sonny Franzese, to prison. Then he turned up in Indianapolis.

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The Last Ride of Cowboy Bob
1 Apr 2019
texasmonthly.com

The feds knew him as a prolific bank robber. But the bearded man who eluded them for so long was not who they imagined him to be. And absolutely no one expected the story to end the way it did.

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Hitman-for-hire darknet sites are all scams. But some people turn up dead nonetheless

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How an obscure legal document turned New York’s court system into a debt-collection juggernaut.

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The Stranger in the Shelter
10 Nov 2018
longform.org

Two people went for a hike on the Appalachian Trail. Only one made it out.

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Last December, a Canadian pharmaceuticals executive and his wife were found strangled in their home. No one knows who did it or why, but everyone has a theory.

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Small-Town Injustice
11 Oct 2018
longform.org

The shooting of a civilian exposes the underbelly of a small town police department.

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My Bodyguard, My Self
8 Oct 2018
longform.org

The author spent a day with three men in a high-end security detail to find out how it feels to be safe.

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Narratively | Substack
6 Oct 2018
t.co

Discover extraordinary true stories celebrating the diversity of humanity. Click to read Narratively, a Substack publication with tens of thousands of subscribers.

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A long-dormant police investigation gives the case new life.

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What Happened at the Lake
15 Sep 2018
longform.org

A father took his 10-year-old fishing. She fell in the water and drowned. It was a tragic accident—then he was charged with murder.

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Blood and Oil
9 Sep 2018
longform.org

Mexico’s drug cartels are moving into the gasoline industry—infiltrating the national oil company, selling stolen fuel on the black market and engaging in open war with the military.

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A Turbulent Mind
9 Sep 2018
longform.org

Andrew Goldstein’s crime set in motion a dramatic shift in how we care for the violent mentally ill. Including for himself—when he’s released this month.

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The Great Chinese Art Heist
18 Aug 2018
longform.org

Is the Chinese government behind one of the boldest art-crime waves in history?

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The All-American Bank Heist
20 May 2018
longform.org

Having fallen on hard times, a former football star and the pride of his small town decides to rob the local bank. His weapons of choice: Craigslist, bear mace, and an inner tube.

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Jeff Pike, Texas’s Own Tony Soprano
19 May 2018
texasmonthly.com

Earlier this spring, Jeff Pike, the head of the infamous Texas-based Bandidos motorcycle club, went on trial in federal court for racketeering. Prosecutors called him a ruthless killer, the man behind one of the deadliest biker shoot-outs in American history, at the Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco. Pike, however, said he was just a good family man. On Thursday, jurors announced their verdict.

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The Most Unlikely D.A. In America
9 May 2018
longform.org

Can Mark Gonzalez change the system?

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Murder at the Alcatraz of the Rockies
1 May 2018
longform.org

The inside story of the first homicide in America’s most secure prison.

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The inside story of the first homicide in America’s most secure prison.

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The long read: Under Vladmir Putin, gangsterism on the streets has given way to kleptocracy in the state

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The Encyclopedia of the Missing
14 Jan 2018
longform.org

She keeps watch over one of the largest databases of missing persons in the country. For Meaghan Good, the disappeared are still out here, you just have to know where to look.

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In Northern Albania, vengeance is as likely a form of restitution as anything the criminal-justice system can offer.