Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
avatar

Visual Investigations

The Visual Investigations team combines traditional reporting with digital sleuthing and the forensic analysis of visual evidence to find truth, hold the powerful to account and deconstruct important news events. Sign up for our e-mail newsletter.

Send us a tip. Make sure to include 'Visual Investigations' in your message.

The Visual Investigations team combines traditional reporting with digital sleuthing and the forensic analysis of visual evidence to find truth, hold the powerful to account and deconstruct important news events. Sign up for our e-mail newsletter.

Send us a tip. Make sure to include 'Visual Investigations' in your message.

Highlights

  1. Visual Investigations

    Analysis Suggests School Was Hit Amid U.S. Strikes on Iranian Naval Base

    The Feb. 28 school strike in Minab, which killed dozens, including children, appears to have been part of an attack on an adjacent naval base in southern Iran, where officials said U.S. forces were operating.

    By Malachy Browne and

    CreditPlanet Labs, Rafaela Balster/The New York Times
  1. Video Analysis of ICE Shooting Sheds Light on Contested Moments

    Newly available videos and existing footage synchronized and assessed by The Times provides a frame-by-frame look at how an ICE officer ended up shooting and killing a motorist in Minneapolis.

    By Robin SteinDevon LumDmitriy KhavinAlexander CardiaAric Toler and

    Credit
  2. How Los Angeles Police Officers Broke Protocols and Injured Protesters

    A Times analysis of videos and interviews with police, protesters and legal experts found that officers misused 40-mm sponge rounds at immigration-raid protests.

    By Devon LumMimi DwyerChristoph KoettlMark BoyerJoe HillNatalie ReneauAlex Pope and

    Credit

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Israel-Gaza Conflict

More in Israel-Gaza Conflict ›
  1. Six Deadly Minutes: How Israeli Soldiers Killed 15 Rescue Workers in Gaza

    Israel’s military said it was reacting to an immediate threat when it killed 15 medics and first responders in Gaza in March. But eyewitness accounts and an analysis of videos, audio and autopsy reports show that multiple soldiers fired over the course of six minutes at unarmed emergency workers who never posed a threat.

    By

    Creditby The New York Times
  2. How a Single Family Was Shot Dead on a Street in Gaza

    Last December, video emerged showing the bodies of a mother, father and their four sons strewn across a street in Gaza City. Beside them lay a stretcher, shovels and a makeshift white flag. A New York Times investigation examines how they got there and who killed them.

    By Riley MellenNeil CollierNatalie Reneau and

    Credit
  3. How the Israeli Hostage Rescue Led to One of Gaza’s Deadliest Days

    A firefight amid a recovery mission. At least 19 Israeli airstrikes. Scores of Palestinians killed. A Times visual analysis shows how the June 8 operation had such a high toll.

    By Neil CollierBora ErdenK.K. Rebecca LaiRiley MellenBilal ShbairAnjali SinghviAinara Tiefenthäler and

    CreditThe New York Times
  4. Israeli Bulldozers Flatten Mile After Mile in the West Bank

    Videos from Tulkarm and Jenin show bulldozers destroying infrastructure and businesses, as well as soldiers impeding local emergency responders.

    By Erika SolomonLauren Leatherby and

    Credit
  5. 2,000-Pound Bombs Likely Used in Al-Mawasi Strike

    The large size of the two craters left in the aftermath of the attack suggest that Israel used the powerful bombs, according to experts and a New York Times analysis.

    By Sanjana VargheseMalachy Browne and

    Large craters at the site of an Israeli strike on Al-Mawasi, an area of the southern Gaza Strip, on Tuesday.
    CreditHaitham Imad/EPA, via Shutterstock

Russia-Ukraine War

More in Russia-Ukraine War ›
  1. Caught on Camera, Traced by Phone: The Russian Military Unit That Killed Dozens in Bucha

    Exclusive phone records, documents, interviews and thousands of hours of video reveal how a Russian paratrooper unit killed dozens of people on one street in March.

    By Yousur Al-HlouMasha FroliakDmitriy KhavinChristoph KoettlHaley WillisAlexander CardiaNatalie Reneau and

    Russian paratroopers invade Bucha, Ukraine on March 3, 2022, as they attempt to advance toward the capital Kyiv.
    Credit
  2. Their Final Moments: Victims of a Russian Atrocity in Bucha

    Through text messages, death certificates, social media posts, satellite imagery and personal testimony, we retraced the final moments of dozens of Ukrainians killed along one street in Bucha.

    By Yousur Al-HlouMasha FroliakHaley WillisAliza Aufrichtig and

    CreditThe New York Times
  3. ‘Putin Is a Fool’: Intercepted Calls Reveal Russian Army in Disarray

    In phone calls to friends and relatives at home, Russian soldiers gave damning insider accounts of battlefield failures and civilian executions, excoriating their leaders just weeks into the campaign to take Kyiv.

    By Yousur Al-HlouMasha FroliakEvan HillRumsey TaylorMatt RubyAleksandra Koroleva and

    The New York Times exclusively obtained recordings of thousands of calls that were intercepted by Ukrainian law enforcement agencies.
    CreditThe New York Times
  4. New Evidence Shows How Russian Soldiers Executed Men in Bucha

    Witness testimony and videos obtained by The New York Times show how Russian paratroopers executed at least eight Ukrainian men in a Kyiv suburb on March 4, a potential war crime.

    By Yousur Al-HlouMasha FroliakEvan HillMalachy Browne and

    Credit
  5. Under Fire, Out of Fuel: What Intercepted Russian Radio Chatter Reveals

    The Times’s Visual Investigations team analyzed dozens of battlefield radio transmissions between Russian forces during an initial invasion of the town of Makariv, outside Kyiv. They reveal an army struggling with logistical problems and communication failures.

    By Robin SteinChristiaan TriebertNatalie ReneauAleksandra Koroleva and

    Credit

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Award Winning Visual Investigations

More in Award Winning Visual Investigations ›
  1. How ‘Trophy’ Videos Link Paramilitary Commanders to War Crimes in Sudan

    Visual evidence collected and analyzed over months by The New York Times identifies the commanders leading an opaque paramilitary group, the Rapid Support Forces, as fighters under their watch commit atrocities across Sudan.

    By Sanjana VargheseNatalie ReneauChristoph KoettlAaron Byrd and

    CreditThe New York Times
  2. How a U.S. Drone Strike Killed the Wrong Person

    A week after a New York Times visual investigation, the U.S. military admitted to a tragic mistake in an Aug. 29 drone strike in Kabul that killed 10 civilians, including an aid worker and seven children.

    By Christoph KoettlEvan HillMatthieu AikinsEric SchmittAinara Tiefenthäler and

    CreditBy The New York Times. Video frame: Nutrition & Education International.
  3. An Israeli Soldier Killed a Medic in Gaza. We Investigated the Fatal Shot.

    On June 1, an Israeli soldier shot into a crowd, killing a volunteer medic named Rouzan al-Najjar. Israeli officials say soldiers only use live fire as a last resort. Our investigation shows otherwise. We analyzed over 1,000 photos and videos, froze the fatal moment in a 3-D model of the protest, and interviewed more than 30 witnesses and I.D.F. commanders to reveal how Rouzan was killed.

    By Yousur Al-HlouMalachy BrowneJohn Woo and

    Protesters evacuated Ms. Najjar after she was shot.
    CreditAdel Hana/Associated Press
  4. One Building; Dozens Killed in Syria: How Bashar al-Assad Gassed His Own People

    Syrian officials say there wasn’t a chemical attack. But what really took place in the town of Douma in April? We analyzed 67 videos to reconstruct how at least 34 people died in one apartment building.

    By Malachy BrowneChristoph KoettlNatalie ReneauAnjali SinghviBarbara MarcoliniYousur Al-Hlou and

    Credit
  5. Killing Khashoggi: How a Brutal Saudi Hit Job Unfolded

    An autopsy expert. A lookalike. A black van. Our video investigation follows the movements of the 15-man Saudi hit team that killed and dismembered the journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

    By David BottiMalachy BrowneDrew JordanAnjali SinghviDavid D. KirkpatrickCarlotta Gall and

    Credit

Capitol Riot Investigations

More in Capitol Riot Investigations ›
  1. Lawyers Plan to Sue Federal Government on Behalf of Jan. 6 Rioters

    Claims that people who participated in the attack on the Capitol were mistreated by agencies like the Justice Department are part of efforts to cast the rioters as victims rather than perpetrators.

    By

    Rioters outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Even before President Trump granted them clemency, many Jan. 6 defendants had been eager to seek damages from the federal government.
    CreditJason Andrew for The New York Times
  2. How the Proud Boys Breached the Capitol on Jan. 6: Rile Up the Normies

    A Times investigation of court documents, text messages and hundreds of videos shows how the Proud Boys coordinated to instigate multiple breaches of the Capitol on Jan. 6.

    By Natalie ReneauStella CooperAlan Feuer and

    Proud Boys confront U.S. Capitol Police officers on Jan. 6. The far-right group incited violence and coordinated repeated breakthroughs of the Capitol’s defenses, a Times investigation found.
    CreditThe New York Times
  3. Day of Rage: How Trump Supporters Took the U.S. Capitol

    A six-month Times investigation has synchronized and mapped out thousands of videos and police radio communications from the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, providing the most complete picture to date of what happened — and why.

    By Dmitriy KhavinHaley WillisEvan HillNatalie ReneauDrew JordanCora EngelbrechtChristiaan TriebertStella CooperMalachy Browne and

    Credit
  4. How Oath Keepers Are Accused of Plotting to Storm the Capitol

    Here’s a look at the evidence prosecutors culled to charge 11 Oath Keepers and affiliates with sedition— the most serious charge yet in the Jan. 6 invegstigation.

    By Denise Lu and

    Credit
  5. ‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol

    The Times obtained District of Columbia police radio communications and synchronized them with footage from the scene to show in real time how officers tried and failed to stop the attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    By Robin SteinHaley WillisDanielle Miller and

    Credit

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Policing In America

More in Policing In America ›
  1. 71 Commands in 13 Minutes: Officers Gave Tyre Nichols Impossible Orders

    A Times analysis found that officers gave dozens of contradictory and unachievable orders to Mr. Nichols. The punishment was severe — and eventually fatal.

    By Robin SteinAlexander Cardia and

    Credit
  2. How the Police Killed Breonna Taylor

    None of the police officers who raided Breonna Taylor’s home used body cameras, impeding the public from a full understanding of what happened. The Times’s visual investigation team built a 3-D model of the scene and pieced together critical sequences of events to show how poor planning and shoddy police work led to a fatal outcome.

    By Malachy BrowneAnjali SinghviNatalie Reneau and

    Credit
  3. Before the Final Frame: When Police Missteps Create Danger

    A New York Times visual investigation rolled back the footage of fatal traffic stops to examine the causes and the consequences of officer-created jeopardy.

    By Robin SteinHaley WillisBrenna SmithNatalie ReneauRumsey TaylorDavid D. KirkpatrickSteve EderKim Barker and

    Credit
  4. Ahmaud Arbery’s Final Minutes: What Videos and 911 Calls Show

    Using security footage, cellphone video, 911 calls and police reports, The Times has reconstructed the 12 minutes before Ahmaud Arbery was shot dead in Georgia on Feb. 23, 2020.

    By Malachy BrowneDrew JordanDmitriy Khavin and

    CreditThe New York Times
  5. How George Floyd Was Killed in Police Custody

    The Times has reconstructed the death of George Floyd on May 25. Security footage, witness videos and official documents show how a series of actions by officers turned fatal.

    By Evan HillAinara TiefenthälerChristiaan TriebertDrew JordanHaley Willis and

    Credit

Russia Tapes: Healthcare and Civilians Under Attack in Syria

More in Russia Tapes: Healthcare and Civilians Under Attack in Syria ›
  1. Russia Bombed Four Syrian Hospitals. We Have Proof.

    The Times obtained thousands of air force recordings, which reveal for the first time that Russia repeatedly bombed hospitals in Syria.

    By Evan HillChristiaan TriebertMalachy BrowneDmitriy KhavinDrew Jordan and

    CreditMacro Media Center
  2. We Proved Russian Pilots Bombed a Hospital. Then They Did It Again.

    Four weeks ago, The Times provided visual evidence showing that the Russian Air Force bombed a Syrian hospital. Last Wednesday, Russia did it again.

    By Christiaan TriebertEvan HillMalachy BrowneDmitriy Khavin and

    CreditHand in Hand for Aid and Development
  3. ‘Sent Candy’: Cockpit Tapes Show Russian Pilots Bombing Syrian Civilians

    A Times investigation used cockpit recordings to show for the first time how Russian pilots attacked civilians in Syria this summer, killing dozens.

    By Evan HillChristiaan TriebertDmitriy KhavinMalachy Browne and

    CreditMacro Media Center
  4. A Civilian Camp in Syria Was Bombed. Here’s How We Traced the Culprit.

    Eyewitness photos and videos, flight logs and cockpit tapes obtained by The Times enabled reporters to trace an airstrike on a Syrian camp for displaced families to a Russian pilot.

    By Malachy BrowneChristiaan TriebertEvan Hill and

    A plume of smoke rises after an airstrike hit a camp for displaced families near the town of Hass in Idlib province, Syria on Aug. 19th, killing 19 residents. The Times verified the minute the photograph was taken and used cockpit recordings to trace the strike to a Russian pilot.
    CreditMacro Media Center
  5. In Syria, Health Workers Risk Becoming ‘Enemies of the State’

    Physicians for Human Rights corroborates claims that Bashar al-Assad’s government has criminalized giving care to its enemies, a violation of international law.

    By Rick Gladstone and

    Medics at a field hospital after an airstrike by Syrian government forces in eastern Ghouta, Damascus, in 2016.
    CreditHamza Adnan/Anadolu Agency, via Getty Images

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Inside Our Reporting

More in Inside Our Reporting ›
  1. Verifying Images of the War in Ukraine

    The Times’s Visual Investigations team shares the rigorous process of confirming (or disputing) the authenticity of videos about the war in Ukraine.

    By

    A satellite image analyzed by The Times’s Visual Investigations team shows a burning civilian home less than five miles north of Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, on March 11.
    CreditMaxar Technologies
  2. How We Tracked Secret Oil Deliveries to North Korea

    For a Visual Investigations project that looked at violations of United Nations sanctions, more than a dozen journalists examined a maze of connections. But we started with one ship.

    By

    CreditThe New York Times. Maxar Technologies. Getty Images.
  3. How Times Video Journalists Reconstructed the Timeline of Jamal Khashoggi’s Murder

    Last week, The Times’s visual investigations team released a video that reconstructed the timeline of the killing of Mr. Khashoggi and the botched cover-up.

    By

    Credit
  4. How Times Reporters Proved Russia Bombed Syrian Hospitals

    We recreated a day of airstrikes using video evidence, flight logs, witness reports and thousands of previously unheard Russian Air Force communications.

    By Christiaan TriebertEvan HillMalachy BrowneWhitney HurstDmitriy Khavin and

    To show the Russians carried out airstrikes on Syrian hospitals, Times reporters closely analyzed the videos, above, using advanced digital forensics.
    CreditClockwise from top left: Halab Today TV, Hadi Alabdallah, Euphrates Post, via Facebook. Composite image: Dave Horn/The New York Times.
  5. Police, Protests and Violence: How Times Video Experts Examine a Scene

    In analyzing footage involving fatalities or accusations of brutality, the Visual Investigations unit pursues the truth, frame by frame.

    By

    CreditBy The New York Times. Image: Brendan Gutenschwager, via Storyful
Page 1 of 10

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT