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News September 19, 2019

'Unbelievable' Debuts on Netflix

In 2016, T. Christian Miller of ProPublica and Ken Armstrong of the Marshall Project were recognized by the Pulitzer Board for their "startling examination and exposé of law enforcement's enduring failures to investigate reports of rape properly and to comprehend the traumatic effects on its victims."

Netflix has now transformed their journalism into an eight-part series starring Toni Collette and Merritt Wever as the detectives investigating the cases and Kaitlyn Dever as the story's central victim. 2001 Fiction winner Michael Chabon is a creator and producer.

Watch the official trailer here:

The official trailer for Netflix's new series 'Unbelievable,' based on T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong's 2016 Pulitzer Prize-winning Explanatory Reporting for the Marshall Project/ProPublica.

The first piece in Miller and Armstrong's prize-winning entry opens:

No one came to court with her that day, except her public defender.

She was 18 years old, charged with a gross misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail.

Rarely do misdemeanors draw notice. Her case was one of 4,859 filed in 2008 in Lynnwood Municipal Court, a place where the judge says the goal is “to correct behavior — to make Lynnwood a better, safer, healthier place to live, work, shop and visit.”

But her misdemeanor had made the news, and made her an object of curiosity or, worse, scorn. It had cost her the newfound independence she was savoring after a life in foster homes. It had cost her sense of worth. Each ring of the phone seemed to announce another friendship, lost. A friend from 10th grade called to ask: How could you lie about something like that? Marie — that’s her middle name, Marie — didn’t say anything. She just listened, then hung up. Even her foster parents now doubted her. She doubted herself, wondering if there was something in her that needed to be fixed.

She had reported being raped in her apartment by a man who had bound and gagged her. Then, confronted by police with inconsistencies in her story, she had conceded it might have been a dream. Then she admitted making the story up. One TV newscast announced, “A Western Washington woman has confessed that she cried wolf when it came to her rape she reported earlier this week.” She had been charged with filing a false report, which is why she was here today, to accept or turn down a plea deal.

Read the rest of this story, and the five other pieces included in the original submission here.

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