Skip to content

Borrowers Betrayed

An eight-month investigation by Miami Herald reporters Jack Dolan, Matt Haggman and Rob Barry found the Florida agency in charge of regulating mortgage professionals broke down at every level, allowing thousands of people with criminal records to get licenses — many who went on to steal millions from borrowers and banks. The newspaper also found…

Read More

Crime & Punishment series

An investigation by The (Toronto) Star explores the state of crime and punishment in Canada. A new law increasing mandatory minimum sentencing was passed even though Canada’s crime rate has dropped over 25 percent in the last 15 years. The series looks at the monetary and social costs of the a tougher approach to crime,…

Read More

Red Cross blood collection services riddled with problems

Despite being under a court order for 15 years to improve how it collects and processes blood, the American Red Cross remains plagued by problems, reports Stephanie Strom of The New York Times. “The problems, described in more than a dozen publicly available F.D.A. reports — some of which cite hundreds of lapses — include…

Read More

Redevelopment agency’s executives pocket secret bonuses

A voiceofsandiego.org review of tax records for Southeastern Economic Development Corp. (SEDC), the city of San Diego’s redevelopment department, uncovered over $250,000 in secret bonuses the agency’s two top executives had paid themselves since 2003. The bonuses had been paid without approval of the agency’s board of directors or the city council. As a result,…

Read More

Lack of logging oversight leads to landslides

Despite Washington state forestry rules that allow the Department of Natural Resources to restrict logging in problem areas, an investigation by The Seattle Times revealed that Weyerhaeuser, a logging company, operated without oversight and clear-cut large areas on unstable slopes. Landslides last December in Washington’s Chehalis River basin, where Weyerhaeuser was operating, left nearly 3,000…

Read More

$3.4 million in overtime paid out to little-known police unit

“A little-known police force that patrols state institutions and accompanies child welfare workers to potentially dangerous homes piled up $3.4 million in overtime last year, boosting the payroll 34 percent,” reported Lawrence Ragonese and Susan K. Livio of The Star-Ledger (Newark, N.J.). The review of state payroll records showed one employee averaged 45 hours of…

Read More

Construction deaths on rise in Vegas development boom

A package by the Las Vegas Sun looks at the steep increase in construction fatalities during the most recent development boom in the area. In less than 19 months, twelve construction workers have died, eclipsing the total number of fatalities during the growth and development of the 1990s. Experts blame the rise on poor oversight…

Read More

U.S. trade with Iran flourished under Bush

“U.S. exports to Iran grew more than tenfold during President Bush’s years in office,” reports Sharon Theimer of the Associated Press. The AP’s analysis of U.S. trade data revealed a wide variety of items being shipped to Iran – from bull semen to military rifles. Efforts by the U.S. government to limit trade with Iran…

Read More

Chicago’s grand public housing project struggles

An investigation by Jason Grotto, Laurie Cohen and Sara Olkon of the Chicago Tribune reveals the realities of a 10-year plan to rehabilitate Chicago’s public housing. The investigation found “that almost nine years into what was billed as a 10-year program, the city has completed only 30 percent of the plan’s most ambitious element —…

Read More

Sweetheart land deals benefit those linked to county executive

Government records and interviews revealed that a number of lucrative land deals in Prince George’s County have gone to individuals with ties to County Executive Jack B. Johnson. An investigation by The Washington Post‘s Cheryl W. Thompson and Mary Pat Flaherty found county-owned land had been sold to people linked to Johnson on at least…

Read More
Scroll To Top