JOURNALISTS ARE TRAINED, OFTEN SUBTLY, TO think in terms of issues and beats and discrete stories that typically contain just a dollop of context and history. The news is made in dribs and drabs, and the first draft of history is necessarily a rough one. But one of the great pleasures, and pains, of being in the media business for some time is discovering broad, persistent themes in public life, currents that cut across issue, beat and news cycle.
In this issue, you’ll find three stories that on first reading are as different as could be. Former staff writer Patrick Michels, now a reporter with the Center for Investigative Reporting, takes another deep dive into the opaque adult guardianship system. Patrick investigates the disturbing case of Patricia Ellis, an East…