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Researchers sell secrets to Wall Street investors

Luke Timmerman and David Heath of The Seattle Times use sources and documents to investigate at least 26 claims that drug researchers leaked secrets to Wall Street. “In 24 of the 26 cases, the firms issued reports to select clients with detailed information obtained from doctors involved in confidential studies. The reports advised clients whether…

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African-American voter turnout high

Nancy Cook Lauer of the Tallahassee Democrat used local voter data to show that federal oversight of elections in five Florida counties meant to ensure African-American participation seems to have worked: “voting behavior in the five counties under federal scrutiny – Collier, Hardee, Hendry, Hillsborough and Monroe – pretty much reflects voting behavior in the…

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Hurricane related building codes going unchecked

Steve Myers, Bill Finch and Brendan Kirby of the Mobile Register surveyed local governments to find that “numerous jurisdictions in Mobile and Baldwin counties have not been enforcing significant portions of their building codes, those designed to protect residential homes from hurricane damage.” Only two communities enforce the highest level of wind-resistance protection, and they…

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Honorary program gives political insiders cop-like badges

Trent Seibert and Brad Schrade of The Tennessean use state department records to investigate an “honorary captains” program that gives campaign donors, political insiders and friends troop-like badges. “Officials say the program is an atta-boy, a way to recognize people’s contributions to the state. But critics say it’s an invitation for the well-connected to brandish…

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County grant program riddled with problems

Daniel Chacón of the San Diego Union-Tribune analyzed county grant receipts finding a multimillion-dollar system riddled with shoddy bookkeeping and lax oversight. The investigation “found that records for 54 grants totaling nearly $1 million are missing. Receipts that have been collected show that money has been spent on everything from Cheetos to seared ahi crostini.”…

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Some furniture purchases seem unneeded

Rebecca Walsh of The Salt Lake Tribune used Utah’s open records laws to review furniture purchases for state employees moving into two new office buildings. “Many of the dozens of chairs and desks and filing cabinets and bookcases replace stapled-together fixtures from years ago. But other bills might make taxpayers shift in their own seats…

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Weapon seizures increase at airports

Lee Davidson of The Deseret Morning News used the federal Freedom of Information Act to obtain data on weapon seizures at airports, finding that “daily for the past three years, passengers at U.S. airports surrendered an average of 14,000 potential weapons. That is enough to arm every passenger on 33 filled-to-capacity Boeing 747 jumbo jets…

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Alcohol scam drives up prices

Michael Beebe and Robert J. McCarthy of The Buffalo News report that New York’s lax regulation of alcohol sales has resulted in a system in which producers and wholesalers provide “retailers illegal payoffs of money, trips, even gold Krugerrands to push certain brands of wine, vodka or whiskey. Some of the biggest liquor wholesalers in…

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State provided child counseling contracts to felon

Susan K. Livio and Mary Jo Patterson of The (Newark) Star-Ledger investigated the background of Corey Davis, who got nearly $700,000 in state contracts to provide child counseling services despite the fact that “the budding entrepreneur had a felony drug conviction and owed thousands of dollars in child support to two women. Some of the…

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Loan deal raises questions

Mike McGraw and Michael Mansur of The Kansas City Star uncovered documents showing that a city housing agency provided what experts called a “sweetheart” loan to a group redeveloping an apartment building. The recipient defended the financing, although “neither the original loan documents nor later changes in the agreement were ever made public by recording…

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