The Heiress, the Queen, and the Trillion-Dollar Tax Shelter
An ugly family battle on the island of Jersey spills into the open.
David Miranda and the Human-Rights Black Hole
David Miranda is many things—a boisterously proud, gay Brazilian; an outspoken civil liberties evangelist; a freshly minted university graduate; and the spouse of Glenn Greenwald, the American journalist who has been publishing highly classified material leaked by former CIA systems analyst and National Security Agency (NSA) senior adviser Edward Snowden.
But one thing Miranda is not is a terrorist.
Miranda Is Not a One-Off; it Happened to Me.
Before David Miranda was detained for nine hours at London’s Heathrow Airport, there was me..
Elite Criminals and Network Enablers ft. Leah McGrath Goodman
In this episode, we dive into why audiences are finally ready to hear this story – and others like it. She’s got tips for journalists on how to broach difficult, critical stories without alienating the audience.
The High Warren and the Dark Sea ft. Leah McGrath Goodman
Veteran investigative journalist Leah McGrath Goodman has, for a decade, studied the British channel island of Jersey, home to two trillion dollars in offshore wealth, tunnels under a hill, a Victorian children’s school, and some of the world’s darkest secrets.
Is Bitcoin Too Big to Fail?
Even as the cryptocurrency hits record highs, threats to its long-term success remain. (Part of the crypto column series.)
Warren Buffett May Not Be Into Crypto, but His Granddaughter Is
Warren Buffett May Not Be Into Crypto, but His Grand-daughter IsWith record volumes and sales exploding into the billions, NFTs are red hot — and for artists like Nicole Buffett, a pandemic-proof way to sell art. Leah McGrath GoodmanInstitutional InvestorSeptember 24,...
He Waited 17 Years to Be Denied an SEC Whistleblower Award
After reaping more than $50 million from a sprawling fraud uncovered by Eugene Ross, the SEC has handed down a final order denying him any award.
What It’s Really Like to Be a Wall Street Whistleblower
SEC’s Office of the Whistleblower has splashed out nearly a billion dollars in its cash-for-tips program. But it’s not for the faint of heart.