Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "Court Order" ...

  • Detroit Free Press: Free to Kill

    “Free to Kill,” a seven-month Detroit Free Press investigation, found the Michigan Department of Corrections failed to properly supervise some of the most violent of the state’s roughly 70,000 offenders under its watch. A total of 88 parolees and probationers were suspected, arrested or convicted in 95 murders between Jan. 1, 2010, and Aug. 31, 2011. The number nearly doubled from 2010 to 2011 -- from 21 to 38. The series also revealed that dozens of offenders weren't outfitted with court-ordered electronic tethers, and others weren't sent back to prison for new crimes or failed drug tests.

    Tags: Department of Corrections; violence; criminals; drug tests

    By L.L. Brasier; Gina Damron

    Detroit Free Press

    2012

  • Failure to Aid

    Over the last year, I spent a lot of time researching and reporting on stories pertaining to the mental health treatment of people in prison. More specifically, I have successfully fought to gain access to public records in order to tell the story of Tony Lester. Tony was a young man who had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. He committed an assault and was sentenced to serve time at the Arizona State Prison in Tucson. Tragically, Tony committed suicide while in prison. Staff in the prison failed to render aid when they discovered him in his cell bleeding. My investigation not only revealed that he was improperly placed in with the general population against a judge's order and a court-ordered psychiatrist order...but he was also mistakenly given razors as part of a hygiene kit.

    Tags: prison; paranoid schizophrenia; suicide; mental health

    By Wendy Halloran; Jeff Blackburn; Jerome Parra

    KPNX-TV (Phoenix)

    2011

  • Right to Die

    9News questioned the decisions of a small town sheriff who refused to help a family remove their 91-year-old father after he had locked himself into his home. The man was suffering from potential dementia, dehydration, and malnourishment. The family thought the man would die if he did not recieve medical attention and convinced a judge he should issue an order requiring he be hospitalized. The sheriff argued the man had the "right to die" if he wanted to and upheld the court order.

    Tags: Right to Die

    By Jace Larson; Anna Hewson; Nicole Vap

    KUSA-TV (Denver)

    2011

  • Probate Court: A Troubled System

    The investigation exposed a corrupt system within Arizona's probate courts that permitted lawyers and for-profit fiduciary businesses to take advantage of the welfare of vulnerable adults. The Arizona Republic found that in many cases, lawyers appointed to protect the welfare of incapacitated adults were actually paying themselves enormous fees out of their assets of these individuals. Judges, state regulators, and social service agencies violated court orders, disregarded procedure, and failed to keep this from happening.

    Tags: probate courts; legal system; court corruption; elderly; welfare

    By Robert Anglen; Pat Kossan; Laurie Roberts

    Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

    2010

  • "Prison Medical Series"

    In this investigation, Charles Piller reveals that cost to improve medical care in California's prisons was grossly "overstated." In 2006, a court-ordered receiver took control of the prisons' health care system and "fundamentally" miscalculated the $8 million estimate. Further investigation shows "fraud and waste" within the receiver's "staffing programs."

    Tags: Matthew Cate; Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; J. Clark Kelso; John Hagar; California state prisons

    By Charles Piller; Amy Pyle; Randall Benton; Sharon Okada; Phillip Reese; Sheila Kern; Pete Basofin; Sue Morrow; Kathy Knight

    Bee (Sacramento, Calif.)

    2009

  • Nevada DUI

    This investigation found a number of frightening facts, which could change many lives. One of the first findings is “judges have not been following a 1997 law that requires them to order the installation of interlock devices for all offenders convicted of DUIs causing death or substantial bodily harm.” Also, many previous offenders were convicted of a second DUI and had blood alcohol levels (BACs) considered of those with an alcohol abuse problem. Further, found that DUI offenders released from prison didn’t have their licenses restricted for three years after the conviction.

    Tags: drunk drivers; laws; Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV); interlock devices; prosecutors; parole officials; probation officials; death; harm; courts; convictions

    By Martha Bellisle; Kelly Scott

    Gazette Journal (Reno, Nev.)

    2009

  • SEUS Liquidation

    "These stories detailed the events leading up to the court-ordered, Oct. 27 liquidation of Atlanta-based Southeastern U.S. Insurance Co. (SEUS) and the impact on its policyholders."

    Tags: SEUS; liquidation; Atlanta; southeastern; insurance; workcompcentral; clark fain; SOWEGA; Georgia;

    By Michael Whitney;

    ABC World News Tonight

    2009

  • Agriprocessors and Beyond: Inside the Kosher Meat Industry

    This series of articles looked inside the kosher meat industry, a quietly guarded world worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The reporting began two years ago when the Forward's Nathaniel Popper wrote about the working conditions at the nation's largest kosher slaughterhouse, Agriprocessors, in Postville, Iowa, setting off a wide-ranging debate in Jewish community. The paper has continued to follow the problems at Agriprocessors and reported early in 2008 on the debate withing the kosher industry about a widely used but apparently cruel method of kosher slaughter known as shackled and hoist. Then, in the middle of the year, federal agents, citing the Forward's reporting raided the Agriprocessors' plant in Iowa. Since the raid, the Forward has followed each legal development, but has also reported on elements of the story that were being overlooked. The first such article detailed the way in which Agriprocessors had handled immigrants and unions at its Brooklyn warehouse-sparking a case that went to the Supreme Court. The next set of articles investigated the working conditions in the rest of the kosher eat industry, with particular attention paid to the labor battles at Agriprocessors' biggest competitor, Alle Processing, which had been completely ignored. The article and chart on industry-wide conditions were the first effort to systematically set down the relative size and production of the major players in the kosher meat industry. The Forward also wrote a lengthy report on the immigrant workers from Agriprocessors who had been released from prison and ordered to testify in federal court against their supervisors, but were given no means to support themselves before the hearing date. After Agriprocessors declared bankruptcy, the Forward reported on the unnoticed consequences for the town and its inhabitants, from the lowly turkeys to the local bankers.

    Tags: meat processing; kosher meat; agriculture; Agriprocessors; meatpacking; immigrant workers

    By Nathaniel Popper; Anthony Weiss; Lana Gersten

    Forward (New York, NY)

    2008

  • Crime Doesn't Pay (Back)

    A look into court-ordered restitution in Texas reveals that in the last five years, more than 90 percent of parolees still owe their victims money. In fact, only 5.3 percent of the $435 million in restitution that Texas parolees were ordered to pay in those five years has ever been collected. The state does nothing to attempt to collect the money from these people once they are discharged from the system.

    Tags: Restitution payments; court-ordered restitution; Texas; parolees; Texas Public Information Act; City of Houston

    By Chris Vogel

    Houston Press

    2008

  • Test of Convictions

    "Ohio's system for testing evidence and inmate DNA to uncover wrongful convictions is deeply flawed. Prosecutors ignore court orders for testing, judges reject inmates without following the law, and evidence is routinely lost or destroyed before it can be tested."

    Tags: DNA testing; Ohio; justice system; inmate; wrongful conviction;

    By Geoff Dutton; Mike Wagner

    Dispatch (Columbus, Ohio)

    2008