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Portrait of Kevin Sack

Kevin Sack

Kevin Sack is a senior writer, based in Atlanta, who produces long-form narrative projects for the investigations team. He has written broadly about national affairs for more than three decades and has shared in three Pulitzer Prizes.

During more than 20 years with The Times, he has served as bureau chief in Atlanta and Albany, covered health care for the national desk, and reported extensively on race, the South and domestic politics. His interests over the years have ranged widely, from kidney transplantation to the assimilation of refugees to the intersection of race and faith. A native of Jacksonville, Fla., he is an honors history graduate of Duke University.

Latest

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    TimesVideo

    Violence in Forced-Entry Police Raids

    As policing has militarized to fight a faltering war on drugs, few tactics have proved as dangerous as the use of forcible-entry raids to serve narcotics search warrants, which regularly introduce staggering levels of violence into missions that might be achieved through patient stakeouts or simple knocks at the door.

    By Margaret Cheatham Williams, Alexandra Garcia and Kevin Sack

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    Show of Force

    Murder or Self-Defense if Officer Is Killed in Raid?

    With battering rams and flash-bang grenades, SWAT teams fuel the risk of violence as they forcibly enter suspects’ homes. Five months and 85 miles apart, two cases took starkly divergent legal paths.

    By Kevin Sack

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    Show of Force

    Door-Busting Drug Raids Leave a Trail of Blood

    Using SWAT officers to storm into homes to execute search warrants has led time and again to avoidable deaths, gruesome injuries and costly legal settlements.

    By Kevin Sack

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