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Database of dangerous caregivers incomplete

By hdcoadmin | February 15, 2010

Tracy Weber and Charles Ornstein of ProPublica reported on big gaps in a federal database that is supposed to alert hospitals to disciplinary actions against health care providers across the country.  Over two decades ago, Congress “ordered up a national database allowing hospitals to check for disciplinary actions taken anywhere in the country against nurses,…

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Pork or Protection? Follow the money in your community to fight terrorism

By hdcoadmin | February 15, 2010

By G.W. Schulz Center for Investigative Reporting Nearly $70,000 worth of surveillance gear left unused in its original packaging by a county north of San Francisco. A $2,300 plasma TV for university cops. More than $1.3 million spent without maintaining proper documentation to show where it went. Millions more in bomb-disposal robots and new communications…

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Secretive corporate culture contributed to Toyota’s woes

By hdcoadmin | February 11, 2010

A report by Kate Linebaugh, Dionne Searcey and Norihiko Shirouzu of  The Wall Street Journal reveals that a “secretive corporate culture” at Toyota kept the company from reporting and addressing safety issues in a timely manner with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. “Its silence with U.S. regulators, and other newly uncovered details from the…

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Cheating on standardized tests suspected in one in five Georgia schools

By hdcoadmin | February 11, 2010

Hundreds of Georgia schools are under investigation for cheating on state standardized tests. This week’s release of a state probe of erasure marks followed more than a year of stories by Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Heather Vogell and data analyst John Perry about suspect test scores.

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Stimulus funds for renewable energy continue to flow overseas

By hdcoadmin | February 10, 2010

Money from the 2009 stimulus bill to help support the renewable energy industry continues to flow overseas, despite Congressional criticism and calls for change, according to a new analysis of the program by the Investigative Reporting Workshop. The Workshop was the first to report last October that more than 80 percent of the first $1…

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Palin e-mails reveal a powerful ‘first dude’

By hdcoadmin | February 8, 2010

MSNBC.com investigative reporter Bill Dedman revealed the influence of Todd Palin, the husband of former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, during Palin’s time as governor. MSNBC.com staff combed through nearly 3,000 pages of e-mails to show Todd Palin involved in a judicial appointment, monitoring contract negotiations with a public employee union and passing  “financial information marked…

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Seniors exploited in care facilities

By hdcoadmin | February 5, 2010

“Seniors for Sale“, a Seattle Times investigation, found that inside the state’s 2,843 adult family homes, thousands of vulnerable adults have been exploited by profiteers or harmed by amateur caregivers. With videos and searchable database, the three-day series by reporter Michael J. Berens also reveals how Washington has pushed out the poor from nursing homes…

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Claims by China-based stem cell broker misleading

By hdcoadmin | February 5, 2010

In a pair of reports, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporters Mark Johnson and Meg Kissinger examined the overblown medical claims and misleading marketing strategies of China-based Beike Biotechnology, one of many overseas operations marketing experimental stem cell treatments to desperate American families. The two interviewed dozens of the top doctors and scientists in their respective fields…

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Student blogs review workshop

By hdcoadmin | February 4, 2010

By Mark Horvit IRE Executive Director IRE brought the Watchdog Workshop series to the University of Alabama at Birmingham in late January. A great mix of journalists from throughout the region gathered to discuss … well, rather than tell you about it, we’ll let some of the students who traveled to Birmingham for the workshops…

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Wrestlers and real estate: Student investigation leads to probe of sales involving coaches, athletes

By hdcoadmin | February 4, 2010

By Chris Ison University of Minnesota Even to seasoned reporters, long-term investigative projects look like mountains. The long climb will bring breaking news stories and beat duties that distract them, impatient editors who divert them, and months of digging that might turn up little to justify the time and expense. Combined, an exciting idea can…

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