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Flood Insurance Program is Vulnerable to Fraud, Says N.Y. Attorney General
The New York attorney general has released a report warning that a lack of accountability in the National Flood Insurance Program could be costing taxpayers millions.
August 2, 2016
The Recovery’s Racial Divide
The economy is recovering, but not everyone has felt it equally. The wealth gap between black and white households has grown dramatically, and is now the widest it's been in nearly three decades.
August 1, 2016
Is Al Qaeda Gone From Syria Or Just Rebranding?
Al Qaeda's Syrian affiliate has shed its name and rebranded itself as "Jabhat Fateh al-Sham." But is it any different from the terrorist organization that spawned it?
July 29, 2016
Court: North Carolina Voter ID Law Targeted Black Voters
A federal court has overturned what's considered one of the nation's broadest restrictive voting laws.
July 29, 2016
Court Strikes Down Texas Voter ID Law — What's Next?
A court must now rewrite what's considered the most restrictive voter ID law in the country.
July 20, 2016
America in 2016: Partisan, Fearful and Angry
As Republicans and Democrats begin gathering for their national conventions, the partisan divide between both parties is the widest it's been in at least a quarter century.
July 18, 2016
Lone Wolf Attacks Are Becoming More Common -- And More Deadly
Even before the attacks in Dallas and Orlando, the 2010s had already surpassed every decade in the number of fatalities perpetrated by "lone wolves" -- and in the number of actual attackers.
July 14, 2016
Is Civilian Oversight the Answer to Distrust of Police?
Civilian oversight boards have been offered as one way to rebuild trust between police and the communities they serve. But do they work?
July 13, 2016
Study: Election Coverage Skewed By "Journalistic Bias"
A new report finds that just 11 percent of primary coverage focused on the candidates' policy positions, leadership abilities or personal and professional histories.
July 12, 2016