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Documents further confirm surveillance of Muslim-Americans

By hdcoadmin | March 14, 2012

The Huffington Post reports that the New York Police Department collected information on businesses owned by second- and third-generation Americans specifically because they were Muslims, according to newly obtained secret documents. They show in the clearest terms yet that police were monitoring people based on religion, despite claims from Mayor Michael Bloomberg to the contrary.

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Health Care Districts Holding onto Funds While Sick Go Untreated

By hdcoadmin | March 12, 2012

At a time when the uninsured had to wait a year to be seen by a doctor, The Bay Citizen uncovered that California’s Health Care Districts are hoarding funds which should be used for caring for needy patients. The Peninsula Health Care District, funded by tax-payers, held onto a $43 million reserve, but when San Mateo County…

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Milwaukee police fail to follow dept. policy

By hdcoadmin | March 12, 2012

In an investigation by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reporter Gina Barton found that a Milwaukee man who was in need of medical attention while in police custody was ignored, until it was too late. “The man repeatedly told officers he couldn’t breathe, but no one called an ambulance until he lost consciousness, despite a department…

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In Mexico City, IRE brings together top transnational journalists

By hdcoadmin | March 7, 2012

by Lise Olsen Twenty leading journalists gathered in Mexico City on Feb. 18 to exchange information and discuss ways that Investigative Reporters & Editors can continue helping reporters who, under pressure and often at great personal risk, continue to do investigative reporting on transnational (U.S. – Mexico) topics such as cartel violence, wasteful government spending, political…

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Unregulated Florida summer camps leave children at risk

By hdcoadmin | March 6, 2012

A six-month Palm Beach Post investigation into unregulated Florida summer camps has revealed that the state’s lax laws have allowed convicted child molesters to get jobs in Florida camps, where they went on to molest still more victims. For every child who was harmed, many more are at risk — especially in the state’s poorest…

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Behind the Story: When does an ongoing story warrant an investigation?

By hdcoadmin | March 5, 2012

Photo credit:Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times (Editor’s Note: This is Part 2 of our “Behind the Story” look at coverage of the Hanford nuclear reservation’s environmental issues.) Determining when an ongoing issue becomes an issue worth investigating isn’t always easy. Craig Welch, an environmental reporter for The Seattle Times who juggles topics from oceans to forests,…

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Neglect in Arizona prisons exposed

By hdcoadmin | March 2, 2012

Investigative reporter Wendy Halloran from KPNX 12 News in Phoenix, Arizona revealed an explosive piece of investigative work that exposed prisoner mistreatment, mismanagement and neglect in Arizona prisons. She capped off her three part series, “Failure to Aid” by showing the severity of the mistakes made by corrections officers and the deliberate indifference to preserving…

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NICAR 2012 Wrap-Up

By hdcoadmin | March 1, 2012

Hundreds of attendees and dozens of speakers descended on St. Louis for the 2012 Computer-Assisted Reporting Conference, for a weekend packed with data analysis, web development, other sessions, and a panda costume. We had a full team of students attending and blogging about panels throughout the conference. In all, the bloggers covered dozens of sessions,…

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Going beyond the campus for coverage

By hdcoadmin | February 28, 2012

By Mayra Cruz @MayraC27 Campus coverage can be daunting, but looking beyond the campus is a way to get the story, Jennifer Wheeler of The Register-Mail said at “DataU: the databases you need to cover higher ed.” From grants to graduation rates, one of the major databases to mine for information is the Integrated Postsecondary…

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Finding out what public figures don’t want you to know

By hdcoadmin | February 27, 2012

By Jon McClure@JonRMcClure Sex sells. But it sometimes buys, too. Online.  As described in the panel “Hidden databases: Mining the private parts of public officials,” the trick is learning how to uncover the online footprint of public figures and track the nefarious deeds they might do under the cover of online alter-egos. Russ Ptacek of…

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