Malachy Browne heads the New York Times’s visual investigations unit where he and his team investigate key events, from breaking news at home to war atrocities abroad, to piece together second-by-second what really happened.
The work exposes the truth of events, particularly ones that are shrouded in misinformation, conspiracy theories and official denials. He and his team have won two Pulitzer Prizes.
Investigations, presented on the New York Times website, range from uncovering the devastating sequence of events of the atrocity at Bucha in the early days of the Russian invasion of Ukraine to plotting exactly happened in 2017 when a gunman opened fire at a concert in Las Vegas killing 60 people.
On In the News he talks about these projects and more while explaining just how his team works, from 3D modelling and AI to painstakingly exploring satellite images and mining phone records, and how the Limerick man who began his career in Dublin before moving to New York works to stay one step ahead in a media landscape flooded with fake news.
Disability worker says she was ‘shaken’ and in tears after exchange with Simon Harris
Election candidate Philip Sutcliffe quits Independent Ireland after it condemned his association with Conor McGregor
What were the issues disability worker Charlotte Fallon was trying to raise with Simon Harris?
Player watch: Sam Prendergast holds his nerve to shake off missteps against Fiji
Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon.