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InDepthNH.org - The New Hampshire Center for Public Interest Journalism

InDepthNH.org (https://indepthnh.org/tag/benjamin-chan/page/2/)

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    • Garry Rayno
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    • Jen Hollidge
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    • Monica Drahonovsky
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Benjamin Chan

Benjamin Chan

Restaurants Will Ask Patrons for Contact Info To Combat COVID Starting Saturday

By PAULA TRACY, InDepthNH.org | October 29, 2020

Starting this Saturday, restaurants will ask patrons for contact information as the state continues to see an uptick in cases of COVID-19.

Business & Economy

DHHS: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Worker Is 1st To Test Positive in NH for COVID-19

By PAULA TRACY, InDepthNH.org | March 2, 2020

The test result is being shipped to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for confirmation but officials in New Hampshire are treating the illness as a presumptive first case of the Coronavirus in the state.

Uncharted

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Our Featured NH Columns

 

Michael Ferber
SPEAKING OF WORDS
By Michael Ferber

Beverly Stoddart
A NH LIFE
By Beverly Stoddart

Arnie Alpert
ACTIVE WITH THE ACTIVISTS
By Arnie Alpert of Canterbury

George Liset
WRITING ON THE FLY
By George Liset of Dover

Bob Charest
WHY YOU SHOULD CARE NH
By Bob Charest of Epsom

Michael Davidow
RADIO FREE NEW HAMPSHIRE
By Michael Davidow of Manchester

Monica Drahonovsky
MONICA READS
By Monica West

Susan Dromey Heeter
JOYFUL MUSINGS
By Susan Dromey Heeter of Dover

Harrigan
VIEW FROM ABOVE THE NOTCHES
By John Harrigan of Colebrook

Wayne D. King
THE VIEW FROM RATTLESNAKE RIDGE
By Wayne D. King of Rumney

D. Maurice Kreis
POWER TO THE PEOPLE
By D. Maurice Kreis

MIKE MARLAND CARTOONS
MIKE MARLAND CARTOONS

Garry Rayno
DISTANT DOME
By Garry Rayno of New London

Roger Wood
InDEPTHNH
By Roger Wood of Portsmouth

The Laurie List

Laurie Lists are called Exculpatory Evidence Schedules now. They are the secret lists containing the names of law enforcement officers in NH with a history of dishonesty, excessive force or instability.
Catch up on our reporting here.

Event

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Fund for Investigative Journalism

Welcome to InDepthNH.org

InDepthNH.org protects independent journalism that holds government accountable to the people. Please call founder Nancy West at 603-738-5635 if you have questions about donating or our corporate underwriting program. We depend on your support. Read More >>

What People Say About Us…

“Who does New Hampshire want to have its back when the next hare-brained, get-rich-quick, cockeyed, scenery-trashing, money-grubbing scheme threatens New Hampshire’s greatest legacy---it landscape? Well, I’ll want the reporters and editors at InDepthNH.org---the only news medium that staffed the critical Northern Pass hearings, from beginning to end. InDepthNH.org---good, solid, statewide news coverage, the kind you can depend on, the way things used to be and the way they should.”
John Harrigan, writer
Colebrook

"We desperately need investigative news organizations like InDepthNH to counter the fake Facebook postings and toxic partisan diatribe masquerading as the truth. I’m immensely grateful to InDepthNH for the invaluable work they do."
Gloria Norris
Filmmaker, author of KooKooland

“New Hampshire owes a debt of gratitude to IndepthNH.org for its investigative journalism covering government accountability issues. It has been a pleasure teaming up with them to enhance government transparency and accountability in the Granite State.”  
Gilles Bissonnette
ACLU-NH Legal Director

"The arrival of InDepthNH.org has been a game changer. It has filled the void of providing investigative journalism in New Hampshire. InDepthNH.org has provided ethical, quality journalism on issues that impact the lives of New Hampshire citizens daily. In addition to giving a voice and a platform to those who would otherwise be voiceless."
Beatrice Coulter, RN
Co-founder Advocates for Ethical Mental Health Treatment

Treating Mental illness in NH

Under fire: The Secure Psychiatric Unit at the men’s prison incarcerates men and a few women who suffer from mental illness. Some aren’t even charged with crime.
Read our special reporting.

We are grateful to our sponsors…

Why News Matters
This important event was made possible by: Neil and Louise Tillotson Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, Manchester Ink Link, Rick and Kelly Gagliuso, Conway Daily Sun, the Seacoast Media Group, Northeast Delta Dental, Bernstein Shur law firm, the Wyman Family Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, the Gov. Wesley Powell Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, and Peter W. Powell.  

Recent Posts

  • Radio Free New Hampshire: Lessons Learned and Long Shadows

    Editor’s Note: We welcome back Radio Free New Hampshire. Michael Davidow took a few months off from his column to finish his latest novel “Interdiction" about a veteran cop in a small New Hampshire town who shoots and kills a college student in a traffic stop gone awry.

  • A NH Fly Fishing Adventure

    WRITING ON THE FLYBy GEORGE LISET     We have had more than our share of rainy days this spring. A number of torrential downpours that have kept anglers off the water for days at a time.

  • Speaking of Words: Words for Numbers

    Speaking of WordsBy MICHAEL FERBER        When we learn to count, we rattle off the first ten numbers as a set of arbitrary sounds as if they were proper names and have no other meaning.  After “ten,” in most languages, we might notice that the number names are constructed out of the first ten.  In Ancient Greek hen is “one” and deka is “ten,” so “eleven” is hendeka; “twelve” is dodeka.  So in Latin “eleven” is undecim, “twelve” is duodecim, and so on.  This system is still fairly clear in the descendants of Latin: French onze and douze, Spanish once and doce, and so on.  In English it is less clear: Where do “eleven” and “twelve” come from?  “Twelve” looks like it has “two” in it, and the l-v pattern is found in both words.  The first syllable of “eleven,” it turns out, comes from an old form of “one,” as is clear in other Germanic languages, such as Old High German einlif.  The second half of both words might come from an old form of “leave” or “left,” in which case the words might mean something like “ten and one (or two) left over,” though this is far from certain.        In any case, after “twelve” it is clear sailing: “thirteen” is “three+ten,” “fourteen” is “four+ten,” “twenty” is “two tens,” “thirty” is “three tens,” and so on.  Only at “hundred” do we find something new, and then at “thousand”; we’ll return to them.

  • Granite Recovery Centers’ Founder Indicted for Scheme to Harass, Intimidate NHPR Journalists

    Massachusetts U.S. Attorney's news release: BOSTON – The founder and former Chief Executive Officer of a for-profit drug and alcohol treatment company, Granite Recover Centers in New Hampshire, has been indicted by a federal grand jury in Boston for allegedly orchestrating a conspiracy to stalk journalists employed by New Hampshire Public Radio in retaliation for unfavorable reporting. Eric Spofford, 40, of Salem, N.H. and Miami, Fla., was indicted on one count of conspiracy to commit stalking through interstate travel and using a facility of interstate commerce; one count of stalking using a facility of interstate commerce; and two counts of stalking through interstate travel.

  • Judge Orders Deposition of DOC Personnel Head, But Not Ex-Commissioner Hanks in Prison Guard Murder Case

    By DAMIEN FISHER, InDepthNH.org Ex-Department of Corrections Commissioner Helen Hanks won’t have to explain why she destroyed her notes from witness interviews she conducted in the aftermath of patient Jason Rothe’s April 2023 death at the Secure Psychiatric Unit at the men's prison in Concord. Matthew Millar, a former corrections officer assigned to the Secure Psychiatric Unit, is headed to trial in the coming weeks on a second-degree murder charge for allegedly causing Rothe’s death.

About IndepthNH.org

InDepthNH protects independent journalism that holds government accountable to the people. Our investigative reporting prompts civil discourse that spurs citizens to action. We reveal wrongdoing, corruption and influence-peddling while giving voice to the disenfranchised. InDepthNH fulfills the press’ watchdog role as envisioned by the founders of our democracy.




About InDepthNH.org

InDepthNH protects independent journalism that holds government accountable to the people. Our investigative reporting prompts civil discourse that spurs citizens to action. We reveal wrongdoing, corruption and influence-peddling while giving voice to the disenfranchised. InDepthNH fulfills the press’ watchdog role as envisioned by the founders of our democracy.

Support InDepth New Hampshire

We depend on your support. InDepthNH.org is published by the New Hampshire Center for Public Interest Journalism. A generous gift in any amount helps us continue to bring you this service.

Donate Now

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