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Alex Stuckey

Houston

Contributor at Freelance

Investigative reporter working with @TheArcofTexas. @PulitzerPrizes & @LivingstonAward winner. Professional eavesdropper. #rapesurvivor. [email protected]

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Articles

  • Jan 21, 2025 | nytimes.com | Katy Reckdahl |Alex Stuckey |Marie Oliver |Rick Rojas

    In the Ninth Ward of New Orleans on Tuesday, levees built to hold the Mississippi River at bay suddenly provided the perfect slope for sledding. And in a place unaccustomed to such activity, pieces of cardboard, storage container covers and a hard plastic lid cut from a rolling trash bin became vehicles for sliding through the snow. Owen Reilly, 9, was using a metal cookie sheet. "It seemed like it was scientifically impossible for it to snow here," Owen said, brushing white flakes from his hands.

  • Jan 21, 2025 | nytimes.com | Katy Reckdahl |Alex Stuckey |Marie Oliver |Rick Rojas

    A potentially record-breaking winter storm was bringing snow, sleet, freezing rain and blizzard warnings to parts of the southeastern United States where even light flurries are a rare sight, and residents are ill-prepared for a hard freeze. Houston woke Tuesday to a blanket of snow - something not seen in years - and its two airports canceled all flights.

  • May 21, 2024 | sanjuandailystar.com | J. Goodman |Alex Stuckey

    By J. David Goodman and Alex StuckeyThree days after a devastating thunderstorm tore through Houston, the nation’s fourth-most-populous city began lurching back onto its feet Sunday. Power returned to hundreds of thousands of homes but still remained out across hard-hit areas not far from downtown. Traffic crawled through blackened intersections or down neighborhood streets now lined with limbs and leaves piled up like green-brown snow banks.

  • May 19, 2024 | nytimes.com | J. David Goodman |Alex Stuckey

    Three days after a devastating thunderstorm tore through Houston, the nation's fourth most populous city began lurching back onto its feet on Sunday. Power returned to hundreds of thousands of homes but still remained out across hard-hit areas not far from downtown. Traffic crawled through blackened intersections or down neighborhood streets now lined with limbs and leaves piled up like green-brown snow banks.

  • Dec 18, 2023 | newsbreak.com | Alex Stuckey

    STAFFORD – Dallas Garcia’s home in Fort Bend County is trapped between two realities: One where her son, Fred Harris, is still alive, and one where he was senselessly killed in the Harris County Jail two years ago. Family photos still crowd the hallway outside her guest bathroom, but Fred’s slight stature was frozen in time as his sibligngs aged into new picture frames.

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