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Prince George’s County officials abuse credit card privileges

By hdcoadmin | November 20, 2006

Cheryl W. Thompson of The Washington Post reports that officials in Prince George’s County charged thousands of dollar in personal purchases to county-issued credit cards. ” The Washington Post reviewed billing statements and other documents covering credit-card use over the past four years for officials in Prince George’s, where there has been a move to…

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“House of Lies” continued

By hdcoadmin | November 20, 2006

In another installment of The Miami Herald‘s House of Lies series, reporter Debbie Cenziper found documents, emails and correspondence that showed Miami-Dade government leaders were warned about serious breakdowns in public housing but failed to take action, costing taxpayers millions of dollars.

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“Blighted Homeland”

By hdcoadmin | November 20, 2006

In a 4-part series, the Los Angeles Times looks at the lingering results of uranium mining on a Navajo reservation where almost 4 million tons of uranium was mined for over 4 decades. “Navajos inhaled radioactive dust, drank contaminated water and built homes using rock from the mines and mills. Many of the dangers persist…

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College coaches cash in

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2006

Jodi Upton and Steve Wieberg of USA Today have taken an extensive look at the contracts of NCAA Division 1-A football coaches. “Head coaches at the NCAA’s top-level schools are making an average of $950,000 this year, not counting benefits, incentives, subsidized housing or any of the perks they routinely receive. At least 42 of…

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Beyond Sago – a series on mine safety

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2006

Ken Ward Jr. of The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette analyzed government reports and data and found that 9 out of every 10 coal mining deaths nationwide over the last 10 years could have been avoided if existing safety rules had been followed. Ward’s report, the first in a series of special investigative stories, appeared in Sunday’s…

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Clocking the Cops

By hdcoadmin | November 15, 2006

Tisha Thompson of WMAR-Baltimore found that police officers in Baltimore continuously broke speed limits, sometimes by over 10mph, even in the absence of an emergency. The investigation revealed that in an emergency, fifty percent of the police cars drove at more than 10 mph over the speed limit.Armed with hidden cameras, the investigators also found…

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Violent crime in Houston on the rise

By hdcoadmin | November 14, 2006

Mark Greenblatt of KHOU-TV looks at a surge in violent crimes in Houston – an increase of 22% in the last 2 years. For the story, Greenblatt used Access, Excel, ArcGIS, and CrimeStat to first look for trends in rise in specific crimes, then mapped them out to find further trends. Included in the report…

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Post-election mapping wrap-up

By hdcoadmin | November 14, 2006

Cincinati Enquirer takes a county-by-county look at the Democratic shift in Ohio The Herald Tribune’s coverage of the 13th Congressional District recount and the vote breakdown by precinct The Fresno Bee covers the neck-in-neck race for sheriff with a map showing how the votes split

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“Inquest for a Warrior”

By hdcoadmin | November 9, 2006

The Associated Press has published a series, “Inquest for a Warrior”, which looks at the probe into the April 2004 death of Pat Tillman in Afghanistan. Startling findings in the Tillman probe Pat Tillman’s last day, reconstructed Penalties resulting from Tillman’s death Charges possible in Pat Tillman’s death Sources used by the AP in Tillman…

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Mine deaths avoidable

By hdcoadmin | November 6, 2006

Ken Ward Jr. of The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette analyzed government reports and data and found that 9 out of every 10 coal mining deaths nationwide over the last 10 years could have been avoided if existing safety rules had been followed. Ward’s report, the first in a series of special investigative stories, appeared in Sunday’s…

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