The Sunshine State shows there is more than one way to suppress the kinds of figures that reveal the virus’s true human cost.
In the midst of a pandemic, some insurance companies’ profits may be even higher than had been predicted before the coronavirus hit.
Since 2003, 19 detainees have died within Arizona’s detention centers.
Facing deportation to homelands they barely remember, formerly incarcerated Southeast Asians in L.A. are fighting in court to remain here.
Robert Fuller and Malcolm Harsch, both black men, were found dead, hanging from trees, two weeks apart.
The first of the month has come to strike terror in renters, while homeownership seems like a fantasy to the young. How did this happen?
A November initiative is the latest battle in a long war that has driven housing costs in the Golden State exorbitantly high.
While California was convulsed by COVID-19 and George Floyd’s death, the governor gave Big Oil a big gift.
The agency also scrubbed statistics on coronavirus deaths and cases at designated nursing homes from its website.
They died in parking lots, in hospitals, in train stations and in encampments. Now the county’s homeless must face the coronavirus.