The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast. These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need. Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:
Search results for "Sudden Impact" ...
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Sudden Impact: From Arlington and Keller to Fort Worth, the Columbia tragedy affects a variety of NASA contractors
After the explosion of the Space Shuttle Columbia, the Dallas Business Journal identified companies that had done $62.2 million on NASA work during the 2001 fiscal year. The story looked at what the companies were working on for NASA, and, in some cases, how those projects would be affected by the Columbia tragedy.
Tags: CAR
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The Mouse that Roared
"Based on a year-long investigation, the Business Journal uncovered a pattern of questionable activities related to the joint operations of the FBI and the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NCIB) -- a private-sector investigative group funded by the insurance industry. The close ties between the FBI and the NCIB, which were exposed through the newspaper's reporting, raise serious questions concerning how this nation should proceed in the future with respect to cooperation between federal law enforcement and special-interest groups such as the insurance industry.
Tags: insurance; privacy; Sudden Impact; joint interrogation of suspects; access to medical records; racial profiling; lobbying; conflict of interest; misconduct
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Colliding head-on with Uncle Sam
The San Antonio Business Journal reports about "Abuse of power/racial targeting by prosecution team in insurance fraud case that was part of a national investigation called 'Operation Sudden Impact.' As part of that sweep, a San Antonio small business, The Pain Therapy Clinic, was raided and all of its records and computers confiscated - effectively putting it out of business. Some two years later, an indictment was finally handed down accusing the Iranian family that ran the clinic of engaging in a conspiracy to defraud insurance companies through a complex scheme of overbilling, fraudulent claims and staged auto accidents... The Iranian family alleges that they are the victims of a trumped up criminal case. Among the charges made by the family are that a federal prosecution team in San Antonio engaged in a pattern of abuse... (and) the FBI is only working against Iranians..."
Tags: Federal Bureau of Investigations; FBI; National Insurance Crime Bureau; framed; League of United Latin American Citizens; LULAC; NICB; FOIA