
Maggie Green
Data Journalist at WLS-TV (Chicago, IL)
Data Journalist at @ABC7Chicago. Columbia ‘19. Yale ‘14. Former science nerd. Current dog mom. Your token gay/Jew friend.
Articles
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1 month ago |
abc7news.com | Maggie Green |Julian Glover |Lindsey Feingold
ByMaggie Green, Julian Glover, and Lindsey FeingoldThursday, March 20, 2025 11:19PMSAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- For decades, thousands of Native American ancestral remains have been stored away in museums and academic institutions across California, despite a federal law requiring their return to descendants. ABC News teamed up with the ABC News Owned Television stations and our team of data journalists to look into why this process has taken so long.
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2 months ago |
jdsupra.com | David M. Aafedt |Maggie Green |Miles Patton
Starting this year, there are a swath of new state and federal consumer protection laws that have already or will soon go into effect, impacting a broad range of businesses across industry types. Whether you are an established multi-million-dollar company or a small mom-and-pop shop, these new laws are far-reaching, and businesses must review their contracts, policies, and practices to ensure compliance. Minnesota’s New Junk Fee LawQuestion: What is Minnesota’s new “Junk Fee” Law?
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Nov 26, 2024 |
abc11.com | Maggie Green |Tom Jones |Kate Holland |Kaitlyn Morris |Stephanie Ramos
NEW YORK -- Ray Halbritter, representative for the Oneida Indian Nation of New York, has to travel over 200 miles to visit one of his ancestors, who is held deep in the collections of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The building conjures memories of school field trips and blockbuster films like "Night at the Museum" for many, but for folks like Halbritter, the institution stands for something darker: injustice against Native Americans.
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Nov 26, 2024 |
abcnews.go.com | Stephanie Ramos |Kate Holland |Kaitlyn Morris |Tom Jones |Maggie Green
Ray Halbritter, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation of New York, has to travel over 200 miles to visit one of his ancestors, who is held deep in the collections of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The building conjures memories of school field trips and blockbuster films like "Night at the Museum" for many, but for folks like Halbritter, the institution stands for something darker: injustice against Native Americans.
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Nov 26, 2024 |
abc7.com | Jill Castellano |Maggie Green |Anabel Muñoz
SANTA YNEZ, Calif. (KABC) -- Across the country, Native American tribes are struggling to reclaim what was stolen from them over the course of more than a century: the remains of their ancestors and personal sacred items, now held in museums, universities and other institutions that are, in many cases, far from home.
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RT @citehchris: not to be controversial but you should be allowed to leave work early to get drinks if the weather is nice enough

As usual, Talia puts into simple words what I can’t. Instead of raging against the administration that would detain a legal resident without charges, folks are caught up in whether he was or wasn’t an antisemite.

This is a good example of pinning one minority group against another. Jews here are being used as scapegoats so that any anger can be redirected towards us rather than towards this admin. Should be understood as antisemitic in addition to anti-Arab & anti-Palestinian

RT @DrNeilStone: "I did my own research" = I heard a conspiracy theorist say it on Joe Rogan