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 "Washington, D.C" ...

  • D.C. Tax Office Scandal

    The District of Columbia struck an unprecedented number of deals behind closed doors this year with prominent commercial property owners who had appealed their tax assessments, reducing the city's tax base by $2.6 billion. The settlements were kept from the public for months until The Washington Post started mining public records and filing FOIAs, which the city routinely denied until the newspaper's lawyers got involved. The Post also learned that city leaders had kept critical internal audits about the tax office in "draft" format to prevent their release under FOIA. Through sources, The Post obtained the undisclosed reports -- along with a dozen other audits that had been kept from public view -- and published the findings for the first time. The series prompted the City Council to change the law to require the tax office to immediately make public all of its reports -- bringing a new level of transparency to a once secretive agency. The Securities and Exchange Commission also launched a probe to see if the city had kept critical findings from audits used to determine bond ratings. The inquiry is ongoing.

    Tags: tax fraud; taxes; taxpayers; tax office

    By Debbie Cenziper; Nikita Stewart; Ted Mellnik

    Washington Post

    2012

  • Wounded Warriors

    The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review began following up on tips worldwide from military personnel inside the Warrior Transition Units, the special military-medical wards constructed in the aftermath of the scandal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington D.C. After months of gathering leaked documents and compiling numerous interviews at bases nationwide, especially with soldiers, the Tribune leaked reams of secret reports detailing the Pentagon's own inspection of medical wards.

    Tags: Military Personnel; Walter Reed Army Medical Center; Washington D.C. Documents

    By Carl Prine, Justin Merriman

    Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

    2011

  • The Crown Topples: The Swift Rise and Brutal Fall of Maryland's Latin Kings

    An inside look at what happened when a national gang infiltrated two suburban counties. Major findings: in 2007 and 2008, the brother of a brutal gang member started a new Latin Kings "tribe" in Maryland and Washington D.C. The Royal Lion Tribe grew to nearly 200 members and initiated a bloody rivalry with the local branch of MS=13. A group of federal agents took down the gang from the inside after a minor crime brought the new gang into the spotlight.

    Tags: Gangs; Gang Violence; Maryland; Royal Lion Tribe; Latin Kings;

    By Andy Marso

    Southern Maryland Online

    2011

  • Are Our Pipelines Safe?

    A look at whether or not D.C.'s largest utility company, Washington Gas, neglects natural gas leaks, putting the public at risk.

    Tags: Natural Gas; Utilities

    By Ben Eisler

    WJLA-TV (Washington

    2011

  • 60 Minutes: Insiders

    Washington D.C. is a town that runs on inside information- but should our elected officials be able to use that information to pad their own pockets?

    Tags: Congress; Elected Officials

    By Steve Kroft; Ira Rosen; Gabrielle Schonder

    CBS News 60 Minutes

    2011

  • Prison Profiting: Behind Arizona's Immigration Law

    NPR's report shows that private prison corporations helped to write Arizona 1070, its controversial immigration law. The story examines "the private prison companies' handin getting the law written and passed, beginning with a private meeting at the Hyatt in washington D.C and ending with extensive campaign contributions and political connections to lawmakers and the governor of Arizona."

    Tags: immigration; private prisons; lobbying; Arizona 1070; illegal immigrant; illegal immigration; criminal justice

    By Laura Sullivan; Anne Hawke; Barbara Van Woerkom; Susanne Reber; Steve Drummond

    National Public Radio

    2010

  • Washington Mardi Gras, Pay to Party

    Local public officials and employees attend D.C. Mardi Gras festivities each year at taxpayer expense. Is it all work or play? Reporters found local government spent more than $80,000 for the festivities in 2009.

    Tags: Mardi Gras; taxpayer; government; city; finance; money; D.C.; Mystick Krewe; civil servants

    By Alison Bath; Adam Kealoha Causey

    Times (Shreveport, La.)

    2010

  • A Horrible Answer

    Fire years into massive reforms, Washington, D.C.'s pledge to create a more compassionate juvenile justice system remains unfulfilled, and youth in the custody of the city are killing and dying at epidemic proportions. This series looked comprehensively at the statistics and the stories behind a year's worth of deadly violence among juveniles in the custody of the Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services (DYRS), in most cases because they had a juvenile criminal record. Reporters found that during the year they studied, one in five homicides in the city involved a youth in the custody of the city as either a victim or a suspect.

    Tags: Juvenile; Washington, D.C.; Crime; Violence; Youth; State; Homicide; Ward of City; Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services; DYRS

    By Jeffrey Anderson; Matthew Cella

    Washington Times

    2010

  • "Too Big To Fail: How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the Financial System - and Themselves"

    Andrew Ross Sorkin takes readers to the middle of the largest financial crisis to hit the states since the Great Depression. Through hours of interviews and "documentary evidence," Sorkin reveals the "behind-the-scenes, moment-by-moment" steps and decisions on Wall Street that "sowed the seeds" of its slow, eventual demise.

    Tags: Wall Street; Washington D.C.; Lehman Brothers; AIG; Merrill Lynch; Henry Paulson; JPMorganChase; Goldman Sachs; Fannie Mae; Freddie Mac

    By Andrew Ross Sorkin

    Penguin Group (New York, N.Y.)

    2009

  • Wasting Away

    Washington, D.C. suffers from the highest rate of AIDS cases in the nation. While the health department awarded more than $25 million to nonprofit agencies to deliver services to ailing AIDS patients, many rendered substandard or no services at all.

    Tags: AIDS; disease; Washington, D.C.; nonprofit; $25 million; Health Department; Debra Rowe;

    By Debbie Genziper; Meg Smith;

    Washington Post

    2009