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The largest open-source investigative accountability platform on the internet.1,239 investigations. 2,828 tracked entities. 5,682 mapped connections. Zero corporate sponsors. Zero government approval.
ArkHive® is a comprehensive investigative accountability database that documents institutional crimes, systemic corruption, and abuses of power across governments, corporations, intelligence agencies, and the individuals who operate them. Every investigation is cross-referenced with named entities; creating an interconnected map of who did what, when, and with whom.
This is not opinion. This is not commentary. Every file in this archive is built on court records, congressional reports, FOIA documents, leaked materials, declassified intelligence, investigative journalism, and sworn testimony. Sources are cited. Names are named.
We exist because the information is already public; scattered across thousands of documents, buried in footnotes, spread across decades. ArkHive brings it together in one place, connected, searchable, and permanent. The truth was never hidden. It was just never organized.
Create an indestructible public record of institutional crimes that cannot be memory-holed, redacted, or classified away. Once it's in the archive, it stays.
Reveal how power operates through networks. A single investigation is a story. 1,239 investigations cross-referenced with 2,828 entities across 5,682 mapped connections is a map of systemic corruption.
No paywalls. No subscriptions. No donor-influenced editorial boards. The archive is free because accountability shouldn't have a price tag.
Individual crimes look like anomalies. Documented patterns reveal systems. The same corporations, the same agencies, the same individuals; appearing across decades of investigations.
Investigations span 138+ categories across every major domain of institutional power. Below are the primary domains and representative coverage areas:
Each investigation is tagged with specific categories. Many cross multiple domains; a single case of corporate fraud may also involve government corruption, environmental crime, and whistleblower retaliation.
Obstruction of justice, ethics violations, conflicts of interest, institutional corruption, oligarchy, abuse of power
Voter suppression, election interference, election subversion, election crimes, election security, democracy
Crimes against humanity, genocide, military-industrial complex, covert operations, civilian casualties
Money laundering, market manipulation, financial fraud, economic exploitation, economic concentration
Corporate fraud, corporate homicide, corporate negligence, regulatory capture, regulatory failure, contractor corruption
Systemic racism, civil liberties, racial justice, hate crimes, criminal justice, systemic injustice
Human rights violations, human trafficking, abuse & exploitation, institutional abuse, crimes against humanity
Intelligence failures, intelligence abuse, intelligence manipulation, covert operations, foreign intelligence
Mass surveillance, digital rights, data exploitation, platform accountability, technology & privacy
Domestic terrorism, state violence, political violence, mass shootings, gun violence, mass violence
Judicial corruption, constitutional violations, constitutional crisis, legal accountability
Foreign influence, foreign collusion, international law, international corruption, geopolitics, global governance
Environmental crime, environmental justice, climate cover-ups, energy, toxic exposure
Pharmaceutical fraud, research ethics, food & agriculture, global health, healthcare, public safety
Propaganda networks, information warfare, media corruption, media manipulation, disinformation accountability
Sexual assault, sexual harassment, sex crimes, trafficking rings, institutional cover-ups
Labor abuse, labor rights, worker exploitation, economic exploitation
Political extremism, radicalization, political finance, political corruption, January 6 response
Whistleblower retaliation, transparency, accountability, cover-ups
Animal welfare, assassination, food & agriculture, research ethics
Investigations are built from publicly available records: court filings, congressional testimony, FOIA releases, declassified documents, inspector general reports, and award-winning investigative journalism. Every source is cited.
Every person, agency, corporation, and organization connected to an investigation is identified and catalogued. We track 2,110 individuals, 141 government agencies, 209 corporations, and 155 organizations.
Entities are linked across investigations. When the same corporation appears in a 1990s environmental crime and a 2020s financial fraud, that connection is mapped. Patterns emerge that no single investigation reveals.
Every investigation is rated by severity: Critical (ongoing serious harm), High (significant documented damage), Medium (systemic issues), or Low (historical documentation). This helps prioritize what demands attention.
Published investigations become part of the permanent archive. They are updated when new information emerges (court rulings, new documents, additional entities identified) but never deleted.
Every investigation connects to named entities. When you open a file, you see exactly who is involved. When you open an entity profile, you see every investigation they appear in. The network becomes visible.
Presidents, executives, intelligence directors, judges, lobbyists; the people who made the decisions, signed the orders, and took the money.
Browse IndividualsCIA, FBI, NSA, DOJ, EPA, DOD, FCC, SEC, FDA; federal, state, and international agencies with documented involvement in institutional crimes.
Browse AgenciesDefense contractors, pharmaceutical giants, Wall Street banks, Big Tech, fossil fuel companies, media conglomerates; profiting from the systems they corrupt.
Browse CorporationsThink tanks, PACs, lobbying groups, extremist networks, NGOs, and international organizations connected to documented investigations.
Browse OrganizationsEvery investigation cites its sources: court records, government reports, congressional testimony, FOIA documents, and investigative journalism from established outlets. We link to primary documents whenever possible.
Corruption has no political party. The archive documents crimes regardless of who committed them: Democrat, Republican, foreign government, multinational corporation. Power is the common denominator.
Investigations are updated as new information surfaces: new court rulings, declassified documents, whistleblower testimony, or newly identified entities. The archive grows and the picture gets clearer.
ArkHive accepts no advertising revenue, corporate sponsorship, or government funding. An accountability platform funded by the people it investigates is not an accountability platform.
DISCLAIMER: ArkHive is a documentation and research platform. Investigations compile publicly available information from cited sources including government reports, court records, investigative journalism, and declassified documents. Inclusion of any entity does not constitute an accusation of criminal conduct unless specifically documented through legal proceedings. Severity ratings reflect the assessed impact of documented events, not legal determinations. All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Have documents, leads, or information that should be in the archive? Court records we missed? Entities we haven't connected? Submit it.
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