War crimes, government spying, climate chaos, white nationalism in the White House — if 2017 brought unwelcome developments in the world, it gave The Intercept plenty to write about with urgency and outrage. We published some 1,400 stories this year, shining a light on abuses and corruption from Washington, D.C., to the foreign battlefields of the war on terror. Here are 20 stories that are worth revisiting — or catching up on, if you missed them — as this year full of bizarre and bad news hurtles to a fitting conclusion.

Photo: Jason Bean/Las Vegas Review-Journal/AP

The FBI spent almost a year making a fake documentary, trying to get Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his supporters to incriminate themselves on tape.

By Ryan Devereaux, Trevor Aaronson

Illustration: Attila Futaki for The Intercept

Behind the heroic narratives of SEAL Team 6 is a darker, more troubling story of criminal brutality and war crimes.

By Matthew Cole

Photo: Iona Craig

The Trump administration says its January 29 raid in Yemen was a huge success. But eyewitness accounts contradict the White House’s version of events.

By Iona Craig

Photo: TigerSwan

Internal TigerSwan documents provide a detailed picture of how the mercenary firm surveilled and infiltrated Standing Rock protest camps.

By Alleen Brown, Will Parrish, Alice Speri

Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Exclusive: Mike Pompeo met with William Binney, who claims the DNC email theft was an inside job, not a Russian hack, at President Donald Trump’s request.

By Duncan Campbell, James Risen

Photo: Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle/AP

While we are distracted by (or addicted to) the Donald Trump Show, the quiet, methodical work of redistributing wealth upward proceeds apace.

By Naomi Klein

Photo: Don Ryan/AP

Donald Trump and other Republicans decry Islamist terror attacks but pay scant attention to attacks by white nationalists, such as in Portland.

By Mehdi Hasan

Photo:David Becker/Getty Images

Stephen Paddock, the white man who carried out the Las Vegas mass shooting, is primarily described as a “lone wolf” — not a “terrorist.”

By Shaun King

Illustration: Elise Swain for The Intercept

Famed historian Alfred McCoy predicts that China is set to surpass the influence of the U.S. globally, both militarily and economically, by the year 2030.

By Jeremy Scahill

Photo: Pima County Sheriff’s Department

Barry Jones has spent 22 years on death row. Prosecutors have fought against reopening his case even as the basis for his conviction has fallen apart.

By Liliana Segura

Photo: John Moore/Getty Images

Bureau policies have been crafted to take into account the active presence of domestic extremists in U.S. law enforcement.

By Alice Speri

Photo Illustration: The Intercept/Getty Images

“Keep up the good work,” Trump told Duterte, according to an official transcript of the April 29 call. “You are doing an amazing job.”

By Jeremy Scahill, Alex Emmons, Ryan Grim

Photo: Johnny Nunez/WireImage/Getty Images

Yousef al-Otaiba, the UAE’s powerful ambassador to Washington, led a hard-partying life that eventually collided with his professional world.

By Ryan Grim

Photo: John Loomis/The New York Times/Redux

In the Liberty City Seven terror case, a group of street hustlers working a scam fell victim to an FBI informant posing as an agent of Al Qaeda.

By Trevor Aaronson

Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

At Goldman Sachs, Gary Cohn nearly wrecked the economy. As Trump’s top economic adviser, he’s dismantling the rules put in place after the financial crisis.

By Gary Rivlin, Michael Hudson

Photo: Tannen Maury/AFP/Getty Images

Prison rape is a national epidemic, but it’s bound to get left out of the national conversation sparked by allegations against Harvey Weinstein and others.

By Natasha Lennard

Photo: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images

Top-secret documents reveal the complex relationship the NSA has maintained with Japan over a period of more than six decades.

By Ryan Gallagher

Photo: Wayne Hsiung/DxE

By going after animal rights activists, the U.S. government attempts to cover up systemic abuse at the heart of factory farms.

By Glenn Greenwald

Photo: William Widmer for The Intercept

For the people living next to the neoprene plant in St. John the Baptist Parish, the risk of cancer from air pollution is 800 times the national average.

By Sharon Lerner

Illustration: Min Liu for The Intercept

New York City jails are prohibited from strip-searching or cavity-searching visitors. Yet dozens of women say guards have subjected them to such procedures.

By Raven Rakia