For decades, Justice Clarence Thomas has secretly accepted luxury trips from a major Republican donor, newly obtained documents and interviews show.
The extent and frequency of these apparent gifts to Thomas has no known precedent in modern SCOTUS history... 🧵👇
2/ Thomas has publicly presented himself as an everyman with modest tastes.
In this documentary about the justice, he waxes nostalgic about his fondness for Walmart parking lots:
3/ But Thomas' friendship with Dallas-based real estate magnate Harlan Crow has allowed him to repeatedly experience luxuries well beyond his means.
He's vacationed on Crow’s 162-foot superyacht around the globe and flies on Crow’s Bombardier Global 5000 jet.
4/ In June 2019, Thomas boarded Crow's private jet to Indonesia for 9 days of island-hopping on Crow's yacht.
Had Thomas chartered the jet and yacht himself, it could have cost him over $500K.
5/ It wasn’t Thomas’ first time on Crow's yacht, the Michaela Rose. He went on a river day trip in Savannah, Georgia, and an extended cruise in New Zealand roughly a decade ago.
6/ While sailing around New Zealand with Crow, Thomas autographed a copy of his memoir as a gift for a crew member.
"Thank you so much for all your hard work on our New Zealand adventure," reads the inscription.
7/ The justice has gone with Crow to the Bohemian Grove, the exclusive California all-male retreat, and to Crow’s sprawling Texas ranch.
Every summer, Thomas typically spends about a week at Camp Topridge, Crow’s private resort in the Adirondacks.
8/ Inside Topridge hangs a photorealistic painting of one of Thomas' visits to the 105-acre property in remote upstate NY.
The painting shows Thomas enjoying a cigar alongside Crow and chatting with other conservative power brokers like Leonard Leo:
9/ If Leo's name sounds familiar, it's because the longtime Federalist Society executive is regarded as an architect of the Supreme Court’s recent turn to the right and recently received $1.6 billion for a new conservative political group: propublica.org/article/dark-m…
10/ At Crow’s invitation-only resort, guests enjoy boathouses, a clay tennis court, batting cage, a replica of Hagrid's hut from Harry Potter, bronze statues of gnomes & milkshakes at a 1950s-style soda fountain.
For free.
Rooms at a nearby resort start at more than $2K/night.
11/ While Thomas and Crow have a genuine friendship, say sources familiar with the two men, these vacations often put the justice in contact with corporate execs and political activists. propublica.org/article/claren…
12/ During just one July 2017 trip, Thomas’ fellow guests included execs at Verizon & PricewaterhouseCoopers, major GOP donors, and one of the leaders of the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank, according to records reviewed by ProPublica.
13/ These trips appeared nowhere on Thomas’ financial disclosures, where justices are required to list most gifts.
We drew on flight records, internal documents & interviews with dozens of people ranging from yacht staff to a scuba instructor to uncover Thomas' travel details.
14/ His failure to report the flights appears to violate a federal disclosure law passed after Watergate, according to experts.
By accepting the trips, Thomas has broken long-standing norms for judges’ conduct, ethics experts and four current or retired federal judges said.
15/ “It’s incomprehensible to me that someone would do this,” said Nancy Gertner, a retired federal judge appointed by former President Bill Clinton.
16/ Virginia Canter, a former government ethics lawyer who served in administrations of both parties, said Thomas “seems to have completely disregarded his higher ethical obligations.”
17/ Thomas didn’t respond to detailed questions.
In a statement, Crow told ProPublica he never sought to influence the justice and the “hospitality” he’s given Thomas was “no different from the hospitality we have extended to our many other dear friends.”
THREAD: The Trump administration said their research did not "enhance health, lengthen life, or reduce illness."
Thousands of scientists disagreed.
We heard from 150+ researchers impacted by the NIH grant terminations on what is being lost in the cuts. 👇
2/ Their experiences reveal consequences that experts say run counter to scientific logic and common sense.
They spoke of the enormous waste generated by an effort intended to save money: Years of research that may never be published. Blood samples that may never be analyzed.
3/ Grant Terminated: An examination of the consequences of abortion restrictions.
Diana Greene Foster set out to study the outcomes of pregnant patients who showed up in emergency depts, examining if state restrictions were causing delays in care.
In April, President Trump and Salvadoran President Bukele shook hands in the Oval Office to celebrate a deal to ship gang members to the notorious CECOT prison.
But a new ProPublica investigation found there’s more to the story. 🧵👇
2/ Bukele has a reputation as a crime fighter. He’s jailed some 80,000 gang members. Crime rates have plunged.
It turns out, though, that he’s protected another set of gangsters: the leaders of the violent MS-13 street gang, U.S. and Salvadoran officials told us.
3/ In 2019, when Bukele was elected, crime was a big problem. So U.S. prosecutors say Bukele’s aides made a deal with the devil. They allegedly worked with El Diablito, alias for the head of MS-13, to trade money and power for votes and less violence. documentcloud.org/documents/2595…
This is Mertarvik, Alaska, population 300. It’s a new town.
Its residents, the vast majority of whom are Yup’ik, began moving in around 2019.
The move was by necessity: The nearby village where many residents previously lived, Newtok, is sinking, its riverbanks eroding. THREAD:
2/ These residents are climate refugees, a term you may have heard before.
While many stories tend to focus on the conditions that displaced them, @EmilySchwing wanted to know: What is the quality of life for people after they’re forced to move? propublica.org/article/newtok…
3/ To find out, Schwing visited Newtok and Mertarvik more than half a dozen times. It’s no easy feat; neither Bethel, AK (where her newsroom KYUK is based) nor Mertarvik have roads going in or out.
If you search for directions between the two, Google Maps returns a blank stare.
1/ For ProPublica’s “Life of the Mother” series, winner of the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for public service, we reported on five pregnant women who died after not receiving timely medical care in states with strict abortion bans.
These are their stories 🧵
2/ Amber Thurman went to the hospital with telltale signs of sepsis, yet it took 20 hours for doctors to intervene with a D&C procedure after abortion became a felony in Georgia. propublica.org/article/georgi…
3/ Doctors warned Candi Miller that another pregnancy could kill her. Under Georgia’s abortion ban, she died trying to navigate the process alone.
“She was trying to terminate the pregnancy, not terminate herself,” Miller’s sister said. propublica.org/article/candi-…
1/ It’s been almost 27 years since Nike’s co-founder Phil Knight acknowledged the company's products had become synonymous with “slave wages.”
While investigating Nike’s claims about sustainability, we found that workers’ experiences cast doubt on Nike’s commitment to reform. 🧵
2/ Nike says its suppliers pay 1.9X the local minimum wage, excluding overtime, across most of the 1.1M people making its products.
But a payroll sheet for one Cambodian factory reveals few people making that much.
3/ Out of all 3,720 workers at Y&W Garment, just 41 people earned 1.9X the minimum wage of ~$1/hour, even when counting bonuses and incentives. (Many earned a base pay of $204/month, Cambodia’s minimum wage last year.)