News Why aren't clergy members obligated to report abuse in WA? Since 2003, there has been bipartisan support among legislators to patch the state's mandatory-reporter law exemption. by Wilson Criscione InvestigateWest / October 26, 2022
Mossback Mossback's Northwest: Was Seattle too tough for Wyatt Earp? The West's most famous lawman went from gunfighting in Tombstone, Arizona, to opening a gambling parlor in Seattle's Tenderloin neighborhood. by Knute Berger / October 21, 2022
News Jehovah's Witness church covered up child sex abuse, survivors say Washington's mandatory-reporter law, which has exempted clergy members since 1975, enabled the crimes for decades. by Wilson Criscione InvestigateWest / October 18, 2022
Mossback Podcast | How anti-communist fervor changed Paul Robeson’s career The accomplished actor, athlete and singer was an outspoken leftist, which made him a target of Cold War paranoia. by Knute Berger & Sara Bernard / October 18, 2022
Politics State Rep. Rob Chase's re-election effort is full of conspiracies From election fraud to QAnon, Chase — a recruit of former state Rep. Matt Shea — is trying to mainstream dangerous lies. by Wilson Criscione InvestigateWest / October 14, 2022
Mossback Support for this article is provided by Port of Seattle. Mossback's Northwest: Songs for justice at the Canadian border When the government took his passport, civil rights activist Paul Robeson sang for thousands atop a truck at Blaine's Peace Arch. by Knute Berger / October 14, 2022
Mossback Podcast | The man, the myth, the Antarctic penguin eater The famed explorer Roald Amundsen thrived when times were tough, and they were often tough. by Sara Bernard & Knute Berger / October 11, 2022
Mossback Support for this article is provided by Port of Seattle. Mossback's Northwest: Seattle's role in polar exploration Norwegian Roald Amundsen was perhaps the greatest star of the so-called 'golden age' of Arctic expedition — and he used Seattle as a base camp. by Knute Berger / October 7, 2022
Mossback Podcast | Going deeper into the basement of the Panama Hotel The Seattle landmark is best known for its connection to the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II — but it has more stories to tell. by Sara Bernard & Knute Berger / October 4, 2022
Mossback Mossback's Northwest: The time capsule in Seattle's Panama Hotel An unclosed chapter of Japanese American incarceration is preserved in the basement of a Chinatown-International District hotel. by Knute Berger / September 30, 2022