资讯
Detroit News and Pulitzer Prize winner Charlie LeDuff cut ties after the bombastic columnist wrote 'See You Next Tuesday' to Michigan's female Attorney General. LeDuff was a New York Times star in ...
When Charlie LeDuff came home to Detroit five years ago, it was a wasteland. The population had cratered, once-grand buildings moldered, whole neighborhoods had been emptied and left to nature.
Longtime Detroit journalist Charlie LeDuff is charged with domestic violence in an incident Monday involving his wife at their Oakland County home. Judge Jaimie Powell Horowitz of 45th District ...
In his new book, LeDuff finds a body encased in ice, loses a sister and a niece to drugs, uncovers corruption that's bleeding dry Detroit's fire department, and gets fondled by Monica Conyers, now ...
Longtime Detroit journalist Charlie LeDuff is charged with domestic violence in an incident Monday involving his wife at their Oakland County home. Judge Jaimie Powell Horowitz of 45th District ...
Charlie LeDuff, formerly of Fox 2 Detroit, is ready to bring his flair for controversy to Detroit's 910 AM station. News Sports Autos Entertainment Advertise Obituaries eNewspaper Legals.
Day 6 9:32 Charlie LeDuff's Detroit: An American Autopsy (February 2013 Encore) This week, Detroit made history by taking the first steps toward officially filing for bankruptcy ...
Pulitzer Prize-winning Michigan journalist Charlie LeDuff told "The Story" Thursday that Detroit is "in for a slog" as gun violence continues to surge at troubling rates in the city.
Charlie LeDuff is a columnist for The Detroit News and host of "The No BS News Hour." His column appears on Wednesdays. ...
Detroit, which filed for bankruptcy protection on Thursday, was home to 1.8 million people in 1950 but has seen that number drop to 700,000. It also has a huge number of abandoned buildings ...
Charlie LeDuff's Detroit: An American Autopsy. After spending a more than a decade with the New York Times, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Charlie LeDuff returned home to a broken and forlorn city.
Charlie LeDuff moved back to Detroit five years ago, after a storied career at the Times. He was one of the most recognizable writers at the paper.
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