Justin Rohrlich
All the theories on who tried to get rid of Erdogan in Turkey
The aftermath of the failed coup swirls with possible explanations of who tried to topple the president — who, in the meantime, is purging thousands of people.
Why the US Navy's push to use biofuel isn't making a whole lot of sense
The Navy's "Great Green Fleet" initiative seeks to increase the use of alternative fuels, but politics, economics, and chemistry make its bet on biofuel look like a long shot.
The Pentagon Wants Your Favorite Homemade Bomb Recipe to Stop a Brussels-Style Terrorist Attack
The Defense Department's research agency has quietly asked the general public to submit ideas for weaponizing "easily purchased, relatively benign technologies." There are prizes!
Why a Secretive Group of Western Investors Are Bullish on Business in North Korea
A small number of Western businesspeople believe investment in North Korea is not only good business, but morally defensible. In turn, they're called everything from "insane" to "embarrassments to humanity."
'A Series of Razors Waiting to Cut You': The High Cost of Doing Business in Cuba
Thawing relations between the US and Cuba promise a flood of unprecedented business opportunities on the island. But after enduring shake-downs, seized assets, and even prison, some who've done business in Cuba tell a cautionary tale.
New Guidebooks Tell US Cops How to 'Build Trust in a Diverse Nation'
The US Justice Department teamed with dozens of police officers and experts to explain how police can better interact with people of varying races, religions, and orientations.
'A Standard That Lesser Mortals Can Only Dream of': The Latest Hillary Clinton Emails
Hours after the State Department revealed that 22 Hillary Clinton emails contained classified information, officials released 1,000 pages dominated by fawning praise for Clinton.
Slave Labor, the Mast Brothers, and the Looming Crisis of Cheap Chocolate
Much of the world's cacao is farmed with forced labor, and many of the world's best chocolate makers are broke, their companies close to folding. These are the dismal realities of cheap chocolate.
Here's What Happens to the Billions of Powerball Dollars That Nobody Wins
Today's $1.5 billion Powerball jackpot will provide a windfall for state governments, which often justify lotteries by saying they raise money for education. The truth is far more complex.
Pope Francis Is About To Head Into A War Zone For First Time Ever
Securing a papal visit is never easy. And how do you do it when the most public Christian figure in the world heads into a country in tatters, devastated by sectarian Christian-Muslim violence?
Corrupt Insiders, Lax Laws, and How High-Tech Passport Security Is Backfiring
Though counterfeit and forged passports are still common, criminals are increasingly seeking to beat tough document security measures by obtaining genuine passports in fraudulent ways.