It’s been over seven years since 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College in Guerrero, Mexico, were taken by armed men in the middle of the night. They were never seen again. revealnews.org/podcast/after-…
The disappearance of the #Ayotzinapa students sparked a movement. The 43 became symbols of Mexico’s forced disappearance crisis.
In recent decades, tens of thousands of people have gone missing in Mexico. Almost no one has been held accountable. revealnews.org/podcast/after-…
Why?
➡️ The culture of impunity is so ingrained that families often don’t go to police for help, believing they’re either corrupt or too afraid to investigate. revealnews.org/podcast/after-…
While you might have heard of this case before, we’re going to tell you this story in a way no one else can.
@anayansi_dc + @doylekate have been looking into the investigation into this crime from the inside, following the man the Mexican president tapped to solve the case.
#AfterAyotzinapa will also take you from the heart of rural Mexico to the suburbs of Chicago, and expose the unsettling connection between the students’ disappearance and the U.S. war on drugs. revealnews.org/podcast/after-…
Episode 1 brings you never-before-broadcast voices of the survivors, and insight into why the families of the missing 43 have doubts about the government’s official story.
Citing our investigation w/@MotherJones, lawmakers have called on the US Trade Representative, the Dept. of Labor and the Dept. of Homeland Security to review allegations of “labor exploitation and forced labor in the Dominican Republic’s sugar industry.” bit.ly/33A754G
Lawmakers are also asking that upon review a comprehensive action plan be developed to remedy concerns, with a briefing update within 45 calendar days. bit.ly/33A754G
🧵 After a Reveal + @MotherJones investigation prompted action in Congress, a major Dominican sugar exporter razed workers’ homes as US diplomats drew near.
@MotherJones The homes were in a settlement in the Dominican Republic known to residents as Batey Hoyo de Puerco, or Pig Hole, and an estimated 230 Haitian cane cutters and their families lived there. motherjones.com/politics/2021/…
@MotherJones The settlement’s demolition is just one of a wave of actions taken by the billion-dollar Central Romana corporation — one of the biggest suppliers of raw sugar to the United States — following our two-year investigation released in September. bit.ly/reveal-sugar
This week on Reveal, we revisit a show we first brought you last summer — about how misinformation and conspiracy theories begin, and the damage they do when they stick around.
1️⃣ Reveal reporter @stan_alcorn digs into the origins of “Stop the Steal” and examines how it became a rallying cry among the violent mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol. revealnews.org/podcast/viral-…
1️⃣ Kaizar Campwala (@tsar) has been named our new CEO.
2️⃣ Sumi Aggarwal (@SumiAgg) has been appointed our editor in chief, a role she has held in an interim capacity since March 2021. revealnews.org/press/kaizar-c…
.@tsar joins us from Walt Disney Co., where he oversaw ABC News’ digital and streaming news businesses, and expanded Hulu’s news vertical.
He has a record of helping journalism and media orgs thrive, w/deep experience in managing public interest news, audio and video journalism.
She is a veteran journalist who has received numerous journalism awards for her work, including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, several News Emmys and an Edward R. Murrow Award, among others.
🧵 Files obtained by Reveal and @wamu885/@DCist show how D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officers avoided accountability and remained on the force, even after internal affairs investigators determined they committed crimes. revealnews.org/article/dc-pol…
@wamu885@DCist The records, which have never before been made public, show:
The department’s internal investigators concluded that at least 64 people who currently serve as MPD officers committed criminal misconduct. revealnews.org/article/dc-pol…
@wamu885@DCist The department sought to terminate 24 of those officers.
In 21 of the 24 cases, an internal panel of three officers blocked the terminations and instead issued much lighter punishment.