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Students investigate the suicide of a mentally-ill inmate

By hdcoadmin | May 19, 2008

A three-month investigation by journalism students at Humboldt State University looked into the suicide of James Lee Peters, a mentally-ill Native American inmate at Humboldt County Jail. With few people willing to talk, the students relied on public records obtained through the California Public Records Act to piece together what happened to Lee, and how…

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District’s textbook procurement procedures plagued with problems

By hdcoadmin | May 19, 2008

An investigation by David Andreatta, of the Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, N.Y.), examined the textbook procurement procedure of the Rochester School District and found a wide range of problems and waste. Issues range from nearly 20,000 book going undistributed eight months into the school year to $1.4 million in secondary school books being lost by…

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Schools promote students despite widespread failure

By hdcoadmin | May 14, 2008

After a 10-month investigtion, The Arizona Daily Star reports that many students in Tucson-area school districts are being socially promoted and not earning the grades they deserve. “In the 2006-07 school year alone, nine in 10 students were moved to the next grade level, but data show that nearly a third of them failed basic…

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Careless Detention: Medical Treatment in Immigrant Prisons

By hdcoadmin | May 14, 2008

A series by Dana Priest and Amy Goldstein of The Washington Post uncovers an alarming level of neglect in immigration centers across the United States. “As tighter immigration policies strain federal agencies, the detainees in their care often pay a heavy cost.” In the last 5 years, 83 detainees have died while being held in…

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McCain losing business donors to Democratic nominees

By hdcoadmin | May 13, 2008

Bloomberg‘s Jonathan D. Salant reports that John McCain is struggling to connect with the business donors who helped bankroll George W. Bush’s candidacy. “Employees from the securities, construction, pharmaceutical and energy industries, who accounted for about a tenth of Bush’s money in 2004, are turned off by his record and giving more to his Democratic…

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Litigation finance companies skirt usury laws for great profit

By hdcoadmin | May 12, 2008

Billy Shields of the Daily Business Review exposed the growing business of litigation finance. These companies offer plaintiffs an advance on pending legal settlements, but at great cost. “The debate over litigation finance company begins over whether they are making a loan or investing in cases. Because courts have ruled their advances are not loans,…

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Race track deal emerged at great cost to taxpayers

By hdcoadmin | May 12, 2008

A Charlotte Observer investigation by Adam Bell revealed what happened behind the scenes after a race track owner threatened to move his speedway following a dispute with a community over plans to add a drag strip there. The billionaire owner landed $80 million in taxpayer incentives in exchange for staying in town. A review of…

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Taxpayers foot bill for game warden convention

By hdcoadmin | May 12, 2008

A North American game wardens conference in St. Paul last year cost taxpayers nearly $400,000, even though it turned a profit for the convention organizers, reported David Shaffer of the Star Tribune. “Some of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ 204 conservation officers also solicited private donations for the conference &#8212 a practice one official…

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Aging sewer systems continue to pollute rivers, streams

By hdcoadmin | May 9, 2008

A Gannett News Service analysis by Larry Wheeler and Grant Smith shows that “America’s aging sewer systems continue to dump human waste into rivers and streams, despite years of fines and penalties targeting publicly owned agencies responsible for sewage overflows.” Wheeler and Smith analyzed enforcement and compliance records gathered by the EPA and state regulators…

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Network of flipping founders in Southwest Florida

By hdcoadmin | May 5, 2008

An investigation by Michael Braga, Aaron Kessler and Charlie Szymanski of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune used social network analysis and hundreds of land and corporation documents to uncover a web of questionable real estate deals involving a Southwest Florida investor and developer. The subject, Mark Brivik, moved properties back and forth between himself, companies he controlled,…

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