Police Are Investing In New Technology. 'Thin Blue Lie' Asks, 'Does It Work?' Technology has often been proposed as the solution to controversial policing practices. But reporter Matt Stroud says new innovations embraced by law enforcement can present their own problems. Michel Martin
Mueller Report: Understanding Redactions Lawmakers anxiously await the Mueller report, but there's a catch: redactions. Greg Brower, formerly the FBI's chief liaison to Congress, discusses with Lulu Garcia-Navarro what might be blacked out.
How Do Illegal Drugs Cross The U.S.-Mexico Border? NPR's Michel Martin talks to Gil Kerlikowske, former commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, about how illicit drugs end up in the United States.
2 Students Allegedly Cheated Apple Out Of Nearly $900,000 In Fake iPhone Scheme Prosecutors say it was an elaborate deception that involved roping in friends and family, while using nonsensical pseudonyms and a slew of mailing addresses. The plot seems to have come from China. Vanessa Romo
Arrests are up as police work to address crime and disorder, SPD chief says Responding to the outcry over reports on prolific criminal offenders in Seattle, Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best said people upset about crime and addiction should keep in mind that violent crime here has decreased dramatically since the '80s. Amy Radil
Alabama State Sen. Cam Ward Discusses DOJ Report On Unsafe Prison Conditions NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with Alabama State Sen. Cam Ward, chair of the prison oversight committee, about a Justice Department report on Alabama's unsafe and unconstitutional prison conditions.
He successfully sued Trump, now he's exploring bid for attorney general Washington Solicitor General Noah Purcell, who received national attention for challenging the Trump administration's first travel ban, has announced... Austin Jenkins
New U.S. attorney on safe injection sites in Seattle: 'Don't go there.' Seattle's new U.S. Attorney Brian Moran was nominated by President Trump but said hiring process had no "political litmus test." Amy Radil
70 percent of people who died in Washington and Oregon jails hadn't been convicted When Jeremy Lavender came back from a 15-month Army deployment in Iraq to live with his wife and new baby, “he wasn’t the same person,” according to Lavender’s ex-wife, Myra Shearer. Sydney Brownstone
Newly Elected County Judge's Online Plans Forced His Resignation Bill McLeod posted that he would one day love to run for Texas' supreme court. The state's constitution says for a county judge to announce candidacy for another office means automatic resignation.