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 "United States" ...

  • Driven To Distraction

    This seven-month-long investigation revealed serious crashes, injuries and deaths caused by a danger that now exists in virtually every police car in the United States. Dashboard-mounted technology has turned modern patrol cars into offices on wheels. Computers, cameras, GPS devices, radios, smart phones and license plate scanners compete for the officer’s attention while driving, and the consequences of those distractions can be life altering. The series led to significant policy changes at two of the largest police departments in Texas. It sparked action from the world’s largest organization of police leaders. And our reporting also became mandatory safety training viewing for every highway trooper in one state.

    Tags: Police; patrol cars; crashes; injuries; deaths; driving safety; highway trooper

    By Reporter: Scott Friedman; Producer: Eva Parks; Photojournalist: Peter Hull; Researcher: Shane Allen; Executive Producer: Shannon Hammel

    KXAS-TV (Dallas)

    2012

  • Truthout on the Border

    The true intent of United States Foreign Policy in regards to the war on drugs in Mexico and Latin America is hidden behind many pantallas (screens in Spanish). In ten installments, posted in the first half of 2012, the Truthout on the Mexican Border series exposed the unofficial intentions of the US war on drugs in Latin America and its deadly impact. By connecting the dots in ten successively posted articles, the war on drugs appears to be a screen behind which goals of US military and economic hegemony can more easily be achieved in Latin American nations. Many Mexicans know that when it comes to corruption, drugs and crime in their nation, las pantallas usually prevent them from knowing the truth. The same is true of the US war on drugs, which has resulted in deaths and disappearances that are estimated to reach between 60,000 – 120,000 in the six year rule of Mexican President Felipe Calderón (ending on November 30, 2012). Truthout regularly covers US foreign policy and its impact in Latin America. The Truthout on the Mexican Border series was written to create a comprehensive understanding of what is behind the diplomatic and political screens – weaving in such seemingly diverse topics as US immigration and gun policies to understand the dark underside of US hemispheric intentions in Mexico and Latin America.

    Tags: U.S.; foreign policy; Mexico; Latin America; drug war; corruption; crime

    By Mark Karlin

    Truthout.org

    2012

  • Abuse and Neglect of the Brain Injured

    These stories revealed a disturbing pattern of abuse and mistreatment of severely brain-injured people in the United States. At one of the largest rehabilitation facilities in the country, Bloomberg uncovered a decades-long history of death, abuse and neglect. Another story reported on thousands of other brain-injured patients warehoused in nursing homes with little or no treatment and in conditions that ranged from filthy to dangerous.

    Tags: Abuse; brain-injured; rehabilitation facilities; death; neglect; nursing homes

    By David Armstrong

    Bloomberg News (New York)

    2012

  • Grim Reapers

    Maricopa County, Arizona, has faced economic hurdles in paying for representation of indigent defendants charged with capital crimes. In recent years, the county supplanted other jurisdictions as the unofficial “death penalty capital” of the United States. “Grim Reaper” describes how a prominent capital criminal-defense attorney committed serious ethical and potentially criminal violations over a period of five years, during which time he collected more than $2.4 million from the county, including payment for work that he never had performed. in the wake of publication, law enforcement initiated a still-ongoing criminal investigation (as did the State Bar of Arizona), and the county's presiding judge announced sweeping and immediate changes in how criminal-defense attorneys representing indigent clients would be vetted, selected and paid.

    Tags: Crimes; charges; criminal justice system; capital crimes

    By Paul Rubin

    Phoenix New Times

    2012

  • Prescription For Cheating

    Our investigation revealed a long-time practice in which radiologists have cheated on their board exams. We found these doctors actually memorized the test questions and answers and even created elaborate Power Points with the information shared among residents at radiology programs across the United States.

    Tags: Radiologists; radiology; board exams; cheating

    By Scott Zamost, Drew Griffin, Azadeh Ansari

    CNN

    2012

  • Children in the Fields

    One Congresswoman calls it America’s dirty secret: children, some as young as eight years old, working full-time in agricultural fields across the United States. During the last year, NBC’s Bay Area Investigative Unit uncovered that secret activity, put together a project that gained national attention and prompted action in the United States Congress. And we discovered it is not just California where this is happening. NBC Bay Area’s Investigative Unit partnered with CNBC to expose similar instances of children working in the fields across the United States.

    Tags: child labor; underaged labor; agricultural fields

    By NBC BAY AREA (KNTV): STEPHEN STOCK; DAVID PAREDES; MATT GOLDBERG; JAMIE PERAZA; CNBC: SABRINA KORBER; JEFF POHLMAN; SCOTT MATTHEWS

    NBC Bay Area

    2012

  • No. 9: The 1968 Farmington Mine Disaster

    The 1968 Farmington Coal Mine Disaster prompted Congress to pass the 1969 Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act, the first law to set meaningful underground safety standards and fines for violations. Despite the importance of the tragedy, which took the lives of 78 men, neither federal nor the state government determined the cause of the disaster. The state did not produce a final report as was required by West Virginia law, and the federal government did not make public its final, inconclusive report until 1990. This book pieces the story together, documenting the dangerous conditions that plagued the No. 9 from 1935 through the first deadly disaster in 1954 that killed 16 men and up to the 1968 tragedy.

    Tags: farmington coal mine; virginia; united states; safety; coal

    By Bonnie E. Stewart

    West Virginia University Press

    2011

  • At The Devil's Table

    The inner-workings of Columbia's Cali cocaine cartel, the world's biggest and richest crime syndicate, are opened to public view like few organized crime enterprises have ever been exposed in this book based on the story of Jorge Salcedo- a former chief of security for the cartel who now lives under witness protection somewhere in the United States.

    Tags: columbia; cartel; crime; cocaine; security

    By William Rempel

    Random House

    2011

  • Code Green: Bleeding Dollars

    Code Green: Bleeding Dollars is a yearlong investigation by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review into the major underlying causes behind skyrocketing health care costs in the United States.

    Tags: code green; health care costs; hospitals

    By Luis Fabregas, Andrew Corte, Jason Lanza, J.C. Schisler

    Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

    2011

  • Scout's Honor

    The goal was to investigate the issue of sexual abuse inside Boy Scout organizations in both Canada and the United States by exploring one particular case that touched both sides of the border. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Los Angeles Times teamed up to investigate the case of Richard Turley while also looking at the scope of the wider problem in both countries and the impact on individuals affected.

    Tags: Boy Scouts; Richard Turley; child abuse; sexual abuse

    By Timothy Sawa; Angla Gilbert; Stacey Cardigan Smith; Diana Swain; Curt Petrovish; Amber Hildebrandt; Lily Boisson; Samantha Lash; Jason Felch; Kim Christensen

    CBC News

    2011