Skip to content

The 2025 Freelance Fellowship Recipients

Innocent man likely executed in Texas

By hdcoadmin | November 22, 2005

Lise Olsen of the Houston Chronicle reports that a witness now says he was influenced by police to identify Ruben Cantu, then 17, as the killer in an alleged murder-robbery. Cantu, who claimed to have been framed in the capital murder case, was executed in August 1993. “A dozen years after his execution, a Houston…

Read More

‘Guest workers’ suffer from exploitation, neglect

By hdcoadmin | November 22, 2005

A nine-month investigation by Tom Knudson and Hector Amezcua of The Sacramento Bee “has found pineros [Latino forest workers in the United States] are victims of employer exploitation, government neglect and a contracting system that insulates landowners — including the U.S. government — from responsibility.” The report, “based on more than 150 interviews across Mexico,…

Read More

Ky. economic incentives fall short

By hdcoadmin | November 22, 2005

A series of Lexington Herald-Leader reports from John Stamper and Bill Estep, with contributions from Linda J. Johnson, computer-assisted reporting coordinator, reporter Linda Blackford and news researcher Lu-Ann Farrar, examines Kentucky’s expensive efforts to recruit industries and failures in the program. “Instead, at a cost of $1.8 billion, Kentucky’s main economic-incentive programs have overburdened taxpayers…

Read More

FOI audit shows S.C. officials suspicious, uncooperative

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2005

Jim Davenport of The Associated Press wrote a series of reports detailing the costs of public records and abuse of executive sessions, as part of a statewide Freedom of Information audit completed by The Associated Press and the South Carolina Press Association. The investigation found that a quarter of elected officials in a statewide survey…

Read More

Mortgage fraud surges in Chicago

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2005

David Jackson, with contributions from Ray Gibson, Todd Lighty and John McCormick of the Chicago Tribune, reviewed thousands of pages of land and court records and interviewed more than 100 people to show that a white-collar crime wave is raking Chicago’s poorest communities, robbing vulnerable families of their homes and draining billions of dollars from…

Read More

Land deal results in huge profits for developers

By hdcoadmin | November 16, 2005

Bert Dalmer of The Des Moines Register analyzed land records to uncover an insider land deal that makes big-name developers rich but ends with taxpayers paying twice as much. The operators of a struggling scale-model air show sold 84 acres along Interstate Highway 35 at $15,000 an acre, though other land being sold in the…

Read More

Flawed homes go unrepaired in hurricane-prone area

By hdcoadmin | November 16, 2005

Mc Nelly Torres of South Florida Sun-Sentinel reports that, despite an engineer’s independent study showing workmanship and materials that did not meet standards in a hurricane-prone area, homeowners have been waiting 10 years for their homes to be fixed. Torres reviewed hundreds of records, including a grand jury report, two independent studies, and other construction-related…

Read More

Calif. conservators profit from vulnerable seniors

By hdcoadmin | November 16, 2005

Evelyn Larrubia, Jack Leonard and Robin Fields of the Los Angeles Times examined records of more than 2,400 cases handled by California’s professional conservators since 1997 to produce a detailed four-part series on the state’s failure to protect its senior citizens from those hired to handle their affairs. More than 500 seniors were entrusted to…

Read More

Car stipends guzzling cash

By hdcoadmin | November 15, 2005

Tawnell Hobbs and Kent Fischer of The Dallas Morning News reviewed district records to show that more than 2,300 school district employees are getting car stipends this year, at a total cost of nearly $3.7 million. This despite the fact that their job description does not include travel. "In a year when DISD cut some…

Read More

Troopers with political connections win promotions

By hdcoadmin | November 15, 2005

Brad Schrade of The Tennessean analyzed three years of the patrol’s promotions and proposed promotions to show that two-thirds of Tennessee Highway Patrol officers tapped for promotion under Gov. Phil Bredesen gave money to his campaign or had family or political patrons who did. Among those with such connections, more than half were promoted over…

Read More

Categories

Archives

Scroll To Top