Top Stories
This is the second installment of a two-part series about the lingering repercussions of Detroit's rape kit backlog. It examines how Terance Calhoun's wrongful imprisonment for a serial rapist's crimes ended up claiming multiple victims.
What you need to know for the 2024 Election
Dough Dynasty
Latest Stories
-
The Michigan House of Representatives has voted to outlaw the possession of tools designed to break into a car with the intent of stealing it.
-
One of the chief targets of Michigan Attorney Dana Nessel’s failed Flint water prosecutions has filed a notice that he intends to sue the state.
-
The plaintiffs allege the U.S. EPA failed to adequately intervene to control harmful algal blooms stemming from manure runoff flowing into Lake Erie.
-
A pair of bipartisan bills in the Michigan Senate would exclude "independent activities" from the legal definition of child neglect.
-
Researchers look at how to control the parasite that causes swimmer’s itch, a husband-and-wife team of professional mushroom hunters offer their spring foraging tips, and the history of an undergarments factory run by women in the Upper Peninsula.
-
Public Media Giving Days is a two-day event to celebrate the importance of public media in your community!
-
Stateside talks with Michigan Public reporter Sarah Cwiek about the continuing repercussions of Detroit's rape kit backlog — including a wrongful conviction that allowed a serial offender to continue his crimes.
-
Two new members are taking their seats in the Michigan House of Representatives. The chamber is officially back to full capacity — and a two-seat Democratic majority.
-
A bill passed in the Michigan Senate Tuesday would require an election recount petition to be submitted in good faith that it could sway that election’s results.
-
Michigan's unemployment agency has reached a tentative $55 million agreement to resolve a lawsuit filed by workers who were wrongly forced to repay jobless benefits.
-
Wildlife researchers say the wolf population on a remote Lake Superior island is stable. But they say the moose population declined by 14% from last year.
-
A closer look at school budgets across the state, a cookbook combining midwestern and Middle Eastern food sensibilities, the appearance of racist billboards across metro Detroit, and the lingering effects of Detroit's rape kit backlog.
-
A look at state legislative races, Great Lakes fisheries learning Icelandic techniques, the best advice on drawing, when U.S. women lost their citizenship, and remembering the push to divest Michigan from apartheid-era South Africa.
-
More than 300 University of Michigan staff, faculty, and alums have signed a letter asking the University to cancel its plan to use trained volunteers for "protest and disruption" response at commencements this year.
-
Join Michigan Public’s Environment Report host Lester Graham along with documentary co-host Rebecca Williams at this live discussion as we look at what’s happening to water birds. Birds are considered sentinel species: and scientists say what’s happening to birds can have implications for human health.
-
Students continue to protest at campuses across the country, despite the risk of arrest. Some schools now threaten demonstrators with disciplinary action, while others promise the opposite.
Close To Home: The Conflict In Gaza
Stateside Show & Podcast Episodes
News Headlines From NPR
- Hormones for menopause are safe, study finds. Here's what changed
- Harvey Weinstein's New York trial, round two, is likely to move forward in the fall
- Arizona lawmakers vote by a narrow margin to repeal Civil War-era abortion ban
- Fed keeps interest rates at 23-year high
- Biden forgives more than $6 billion in loans for 317,000 Art Institutes students
- Elisabeth Moss embraces her best role yet as a secret agent in 'The Veil'