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Supporters of President Donald Trump descend on the U.S. Capitol, Jan. 6, 2021, as Congress was meeting to certify Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election. (AP Photo / Jose Luis Magana)

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Exclusive AP analysis, reporting on Jan. 6 cases reveals judges’ sentencing patterns

JUNE 17, 2022

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In a long-exposure photo made May 25, 2022, traffic drives past a makeshift memorial for Samara Banks and her three children who were struck and killed by a car in 2013 on Roosevelt Boulevard in Philadelphia. The Boulevard, sometimes called “the corridor of death,” is among the highly dangerous traffic areas in communities of color throughout the U.S. suffering from disproportionately high rates of vehicle fatalities and poor infrastructure. (AP Photo / Matt Rourke)

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Beyond the numbers, AP puts faces to the disparity in road fatalities for communities of color

JUNE 10, 2022

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A flare burns at Venture Global LNG in Cameron, La., April 21, 2022. The new facility, which exports liquefied natural gas, is one of several like it along the Gulf Coast — and tmore are proposed for Louisiana and Texas. The U.S. has become the world’s largest exporter of LNG, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine heightened demand for the fuel as countries in Europe cut their reliance on Russian energy. But the U.S. expansion of LNG facilities has come with consequences for Gulf Coast residents threatened by extreme weather, and for the planet threatened by greenhouse gases. Natural gas from the Permian Basin in Texas and other areas is sent by pipeline to the export facilities. It is then cooled and liquefied, making it possible to send much greater quantities by ship to Asia, Europe and other places that are hungry for natural gas. (AP Photo / Martha Irvine)

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AP: Expanding Gulf Coast gas exports raise residents’ concerns

JUNE 10, 2022

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Vincent Salazar, right, father of Layla Salazar, weeps while kneeling in front of a cross with his daughter's name at a memorial site for the victims killed in this week's elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, Friday, May 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)

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AP delivers fast, comprehensive, all-formats coverage of Uvalde, Texas, school shooting

JUNE 3, 2022

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At left, residents of Mariupol, Ukraine, wait for food at the field kitchen outside the Donetsk Academic Regional Drama Theatre, March 9, 2022.. The theater was in use as the city’s main bomb shelter when a Russian airstrike destroyed much of the building on March 16. Survivors say at least 100 people were at the field kitchen at the time of the attack; none of them survived. At right, on March 17, one day after the attack, rubble covers the area where the field kitchen stood. Survivors say about 1,000 people were in the building at the time of the airstrike. AP’s reconstruction of the incident shows about 600 people died in the attack.on March 17, 2022, in Mariupol, Ukraine. The March 16, 2022, bombing of the theater stands out as the single deadliest known attack against civilians to date in the Ukraine war. (Lev Sandalov via AP) AP Photo / Alexei Alexandrov

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Unique AP visual investigation points to 600 dead in airstrike on Mariupol theater

MAY 13, 2022

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Dr. Marta Kopan, 38 weeks pregnant, holds her 6-year-old son Nazar, April 3, 2022, at an apartment in Lviv, western Ukraine, loaned to them by a cousin after the family fled their home in Kyiv. The place in Kyiv where Marta was meant to give birth was bombed. Her birth plan, like almost everything else, was left behind. (AP Photo / Nariman El-Mofty)

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Inside a Lviv apartment building, AP team gives a glimpse of life for displaced Ukrainians

APRIL 29, 2022

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Snow hydrologist Anne Nolin, right, measures snow reflectivity at the site of the 2021 Caldor Fire near Twin Bridges, Calif., as raduate student Arielle Koshkin takes notes, April 4, 2022. As wildfires increase in severity and frequency across the West, researchers are studying how charred bark shedding from scorched trees may be contributing to an acceleration of snowmelt, possibly leaving less water flowing in the summer when it's most needed. (AP Photo / Brittany Peterson)

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Engaging AP package: Wildfires threaten snowpack, water supply

APRIL 29, 2022

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AP team tells the poignant stories behind ‘empty spaces’ as US nears 1 million COVID deaths

APRIL 22, 2022

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FILE - A patient speaks with receptionist and office assistant Mattie Nichols, right, at Sisters in Birth, a Jackson, Miss., integrative and holistic clinic that serves pregnant women, Dec. 17, 2021. States with some of the nation’s strictest abortion laws are also some of the hardest places to have and raise a healthy child, especially for the poor, according to an analysis of federal data by the AP. Mississippi has the nation’s largest share of children living in poverty and babies with low birth weights. (AP Photo / Rogelio V. Solis, File)

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AP: States passing tough abortion laws often have weak social programs

APRIL 15, 2022

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Labeled with warnings for asbestos and lead, sheeting covers rubble from demolished barracks at Fort Ord in Fort Ord, Calif., April 29, 2021. In 1990, four years before it began the process of closing for active military training, the Army base was added to the Environmental Protection Agency’s list of the most polluted places in the nation. Included in that pollution were dozens of chemicals, some known to cause cancer, found in the base’s drinking water. (AP Photo / Noah Berger)

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AP investigation: Toxic chemicals lie beneath Fort Ord

MARCH 4, 2022

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At left, nurse Tamzyn Weibort straightens baby clothes in the baby boutique room at Portico Crisis Pregnancy Center in Murfreesboro, Tenn., Jan. 26, 2022. AP found about a dozen states that have passed more restrictive abortion laws have also funneled millions of taxpayer dollars to privately operated clinics that steer women away from abortions but provide little if any health care services. At right, Amanda Furdge is interviewed in Clinton, Miss., Dec. 10, 2021, describing the contrast of easily finding abortion services when she lived in Illinois, but the difficulty of finding the services after she moved back to Mississippi, which has only one abortion clinic., during an interview in Clinton, Miss., on Dec. 10, 2021. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

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Accountability reporting uncovers taxpayer-funded anti-abortion centers, racial disparities in access

FEB. 11, 2022

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People gather at heavily damaged house in the Syrian village of Atmeh in Idlib province, Syria, Feb. 3, 2022, the morning after a raid by the U.S. military that reportedly left 13 people dead, including Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, leader of the Islamic State group. U.S. officials said al Qurayshi (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed)

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AP out front on US raid where leader of Islamic State group died

FEB. 11, 2022

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