Resource Center

Stories

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 "TRI" ...

  • Congressional Campaign Marred by Scandal

    When federal authorities charged the finance director for Connecticut House Speaker Chris Donovan's congressional campaign with trying to hide campaign contributions, the Courant sought to uncover details of the probe and provide its readers stories that explained the significance of the arrest, peeling back the layers of a conspiracy that reached the highest levels of state government.

    Tags: Federal authorities; campaign finance; state government

    By Reporters: Jon Lender; Edmund H. Mahony; Dave Altimari; Daniela Altimari; Editor: John Ferraro

    The Hartford Courant

    2012

  • Addressing 911

    It all started with a tip from people on the front lines, and quickly unraveled into a story that has sparked much needed oversight of Ingham County's new consolidated 911 center. The center merged two 911 dispatch centers into one back in June of 2012. In October, a group of first responders approached Reporter Ann Emmerich with alarming concerns about problems within the system. They believed at least two deaths could be connected to delayed response times because emergency crews were sent to the wrong address. They also believed county officials were trying to "cover up" the problems. Using the Freedom of Information Act, Ann Emmerich began digging into records from the 911 Dispatch Center. She obtained documented complaints from the Lansing Fire Department, call logs from the dispatch center, and time stamped recordings of 911 calls. Just days after Emmerich made those FOIA requests, Lansing's Mayor announced he would form a task force to investigate concerns with the County's 911 Center. At the time, there was no advisory board in place to oversee the center. Once officials went public with the formation of a task force, the original board that worked to establish the 911 center was brought back together to begin oversight.

    Tags: broadcast; 911; FOIA; 911 center

    By Ann Emmerich; David Parks, Jr.

    WLNS-TV

    2012

  • Locked up

    A USA TODAY investigation found that the U.S. Justice Department was using its legal authority to decide who gets locked up for how long in ways that reward the guilty and punish the innocent. Our examination found that government lawyers were trying to keep dozens of men who they conceded were “legally innocent” imprisoned anyway. We found that the Justice Department had kept accused sexual predators locked up for years past the end of their prison sentences on the basis of faulty psychological assessments. And exposed a brazen pay-to-snitch enterprise that illustrated how the government rewards its informants — often hardened criminals — with shorter prison sentences.

    Tags: U.S. Justice Department; lawyers; sexual predators; criminals; prison sentences

    By Brad Heath

    USA Today

    2012

  • Benghazi: US Consulate Attack

    On September 11, when a militant group overran the US consulate in Benghazi resulting in the death of the ambassador, the initial information was contradictory. Much of it got mixed up with other reports out of the Middle East about anti-American demonstrations over an inflammatory film on the Internet that was said to insult Islam. Damon arrived quickly in Benghazi to sort out the conflicting information and went to the burnt consulate ruins, which, though looted, held valuable clues to the truth. Her reporting revealed that there was not a demonstration and that it appeared to have been a planned attack that unfolded simultaneously from three sides. She discovered that U.S. diplomats had been warned by Libyan officials three days before the attack that the security situation in the city was out of their control. Though her reporting received harsh public criticism from the State Department at the time, the U.S. government’s own investigation later proved her reporting to be accurate in an episode that continues to reverberate politically. Damon also spoke to Libyans that tried to save the ambassador that night, shedding light on what happened to him during his final hours. While she was in Benghazi, demonstrations erupted against the militia believed to be responsible for the attack, and Damon further reported on the rise in extremism in the newly-liberated country. Her reporting provided additional valuable context about the milieu in which the consulate attack occurred.

    Tags: Middle East; Libya; U.S. ambassador; Benghazi; militant group

    By Lead Correspondent: Arwa Dampm; Photojournalist / Video Editor: Sarmad Qaseera; Additional Reporting: Jill Dougherty; Elise Labott; Additional Contributors: Tim Lister; Richard Griffiths

    CNN

    2012

  • Seattle Police:Vanishing Videos

    This story began as a relatively simple venture; how to get copies of police dashboard camera videos to provide watchdog oversight of a police department facing growing criticism. It grew into a major expose of questionable police tactics and a battle for public access to critical public records that is currently before the state Supreme Court. Over the course of a year and a half, KOMO TV’s fight for videos and the video database became a game of strategy and attrition as the Seattle Police Department denied us access to public records at every opportunity. We tried every means at our disposal to get these records including direct appeals to elected officials. Finally, with no other recourse, KOMO TV sued the SPD and the city of Seattle. Only then did we make our fight for these records public. What followed in 2012 was a cascade of stories; people coming forward alleging police misconduct and an attempt to hide the videos that would tell the truth. In addition to KOMO TV’s public records lawsuit, our investigation has prompted state legislators and other open records advocates to pursue changes in state law to ensure these records can no longer stay hidden.

    Tags: police; camera videos; SPD; Seattle Police Department; public records

    By Tracy Vedder, Reporter/Writer; Sarah Garza, Executive Producer; Kiyomi Taguchi, Photojournalist; Holly Gauntt, News Director

    KOMO-TV (Seattle)

    2012

  • Our Money, Their Failures

    A six-week investigation by The Virgin Islands Daily News into the people and the money connected to the U.S. Virgin Islands governor's proposal for a $55 million sports complex. The investigative report was published on one day across 11 pages and achieved the result of stopping the project and forcing the governor to pledge no further contracts without vetting the principals. In the case of the sports complex that the governor and some V.I. senators were trying to push through, the investigation uncovered misrepresentations and a string of financial failures by a number of the private parties in the deal with the governor.

    Tags: Government; governor; Virgin Islands

    By Joy Blackburn, reporter; Gerry Yandel; J. Lowe Davis; Stephen Cheslik, editors

    The Virgin Islands Daily News

    2012

  • Glamour Beasts: The dark side of elephant captivity

    The zoo industry claims that elephants are thriving inside U.S. zoos. But that’s not true. It never has been. The Times found that elephants are dying out inside zoos. For every elephant born, on average two others die. Just 288 elephants are left inside 78 accredited U.S. zoos. Captive elephants may be demographically extinct within 50 years – there won’t be enough females left to breed. The Times conducted a first-of-its-kind analysis of 390 elephant fatalities for the past 50 years. In a desperate race to make more baby elephants, Seattle’s Woodland Park has tried to artificially inseminate their Asian elephant, Chai, at least 112 times, sometimes adopting crude and reckless procedures. As nearly two dozen zoos have shutdown or plan to close elephant exhibits, nonprofit sanctuaries with thousands of acres represent one option for retired or unwanted elephants. But a zoo industry trade group is fighting a bitter battle to thwart sanctuaries and punish zoos that give up their elephants.

    Tags: zoo; elephants; zoo industry

    By Michael J. Berens

    The Seattle Times

    2012

  • The Great Mortgage Cover-Up

    These stories reveal one of the hidden causes of the financial crisis- how corporate codes of silence helped lenders to flood the nation with toxic mortgages. They document evidence that major banks and lenders systematically muzzled whistle blowers who tried to fight against forged documents, falsified appraisals, and other frauds in the mortgage industry.

    Tags: financial crisis; mortgages; forged documents; crisis

    By Michael Hudson

    The Center For Public Integrity

    2011

  • Come About

    An AWIN investigation into the Navy destroyer fleet and its accompanying combat systems strongly suggest the service will have to upend its plans for their development, effectively solidifying the grip of incumbent contractors on the work at the very time the service is trying to break such monopolies.

    Tags: Navy; destroyer; combat; monopoly; contractors

    By Michael Fabey, Jefferson Morris, Donna Thomas, Richard Mullins

    Aviation Week Intelligence Network

    2011

  • The Offshore Crime

    While governments and citizen of Eastern Europe were struggling with the recent financial crisis and trying to borrow money from international institutions, billions of Euros circulated in the rgeion in an illegal, parallel system that enriched organized crime figures and corrupt politicians.

    Tags: crime; financial crisis; phantom companies

    By Paul Cristian Radu; Drew Sullivan; Rosemary Armao; Mihai Munteanu; ROman Anin; Arta Giga; Inga Springe; Vlad Lavrov; Valerie Hopkins; Steven Dojcinovic; Graham Stack; Miranda Patrucic

    Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (Sarajevo)

    2012