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For nearly a century, police and prosecutors have been on notice that relying on eyewitness testimony is risky. But that hasn't stopped them from using it to prosecute cases – sometimes sending the innocent to prison. The Dallas Morning News spent most of this year investigating Dallas County's 19 DNA exonerations as well as current felony cases to document flaws in the witness identification process.

A big challenge facing North Texas' public schools is immigration — particularly teens from rural Mexico.


Brutality, sexual abuse, failed leadership and questionable business dealings often went unchecked at the Texas Youth Commission.


Dallas Morning News investigation has found dozens of sites with hazardous chemicals that are close to residential neighborhoods.

Texas is known for killing its killers. But it might also free you on probation - if you murder the right person.

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The Fight for Sugar Hill

Chapter 1: A rock on Sugar Hill

Chapter 2: Death in the family

Chapter 3: Walk of faith

Losing Chuck, Finding Sallie

Part 1: Stratton's wife sure he'll come back

Part 2: Wife struggles to move on

Part 3: Together again

Look at test score results, see where the cheating schools are and more.

The proposed TXU buyout offers no long-term advantages to customers, according to an independent study commissioned by The Dallas Morning News

Affordable Housing Crisis

Dallas is the ninth-largest city in the U.S., and it's not getting any smaller. The question: Where are they all going to live?

Part 1: Is Dallas losing its livability?
Part 2: Forest Heights back from brink

Yolanda Méndez Torres' odyssey reveals hidden abuse that's all too common.

Tyrone Brown, a poor, black high school dropout, got a life sentence after he tested positive once for marijuana while on probation for a robbery. Mr. Brown was released in March 2007, less than a year after The Dallas Morning News reported the disparity between Mr. Brown's case and that of a well-connected white man.

Employees with history of serious offenses slip through the cracks.

A seven-month investigation revealed trucking companies' use of felons as drivers, harsh working conditions and the industry's influence in shaping laws and regulations.

Cactus doesn't register on most U.S. maps, but for some in Mexico and Guatemala who want a better life, it has become a destination town - a community transformed.

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