Skip to content

School fails to submit project warnings

Dave Altimari and Grace E. Merritt of The Hartford Courant obtained records showing that “at least four University of Connecticut officials were aware of problems found in a 1999 audit of a $1 billion construction program but not disclosed to state legislators. Most of those problems were never fixed, and the school failed in subsequent…

Read More

Accident-victim law saves lives

Suzanne Hoholik of The Columbus Dispatch used state data to show that a 2002 Ohio law intended to direct accident victims to trauma hospitals was working as intended: “More injured people are being taken to trauma centers, and fewer are dying in small, rural hospitals. Trauma experts believe as many as 900 lives a year…

Read More

Experts cast doubt on cause

Jason Method and James W. Prado Roberts of the Asbury Park Press raised questions in the airplane death seven years ago of a pilot who was about to buy Marlboro Airport, now the center of a massive political bribery scandal. The NTSB ruled the 1998 crash death of Lino A. Fasio an accident due to…

Read More

Meth crisis moves to Mexico

Steve Suo of The Oregonian investigates America’s methamphetamine crisis, now rooted in Mexico, where drug cartels are illicitly obtaining tons of pseudoephedrine, the key ingredient needed to make the potent stimulant. “Mexico’s imports of the cold medicine have vaulted from 66 tons to 224 tons in the past five years, customs records show. That’s roughly…

Read More

More firefighters being disciplined

Jason Kandel of the Los Angeles Daily News used documents obtained under a California Public Records Act to show that 13 Los Angeles city firefighters were disciplined for inappropriate behavior last year and nine others remain under investigation. “Last year, seven firefighters were disciplined for horseplay or hazing; two for creating a hostile work environment;…

Read More

School police accused of profiling

David Tarrant and Paula Lavigne of The Dallas Morning News investigated allegations of racial profiling by campus police at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, finding that “police search minorities more often than Anglos after traffic stops.” In addition, there have been complaints about pedestrian stops, which campus police do not keep…

Read More

Many school bus drivers have bad records

Cynthia Kopkowski of The Palm Beach Post, with assistance from William M. Hartnett and researchers Krista Pegnetter and Angelica Cortez, reviewed school bus accident data and motor vehicle records for 130 drivers to find that “nine drivers have been charged with crimes within the past 10 years or within several years of being hired. One…

Read More

Minorities face tough discipline

Melissa Jenco of the Daily Herald analyzed Illinois education data to show that “racial disparities in discipline are not just a suburban trend. Statewide, during the 2002-03 school year, the expulsion and suspension rate for black students was three times higher than for white students. There were similar disparities for Latino students, too.”

Read More

Street gun dealers go to jail, while licensed dealers get a free pass

Susan Schulman, Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck of The Buffalo News uses public records to investigate gun dealers in a four-day series. The investigation found that while street gun dealers go to jail, licensed gun merchants get a free pass. “Gun shows are a prime source of crime weapons in many states…Despite those concerns, the…

Read More

Congressman’s sale of home to contractor questioned

Marcus Stern of the San Diego Union-Tribune investigates a defense contractor’s relationship with U.S. Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham and how the contractor “took a $700,000 loss on the purchase of the congressman’s Del Mar house while the congressman, a member of the influential defense appropriations subcommittee, was supporting the contractor’s efforts to get tens of…

Read More
Scroll To Top