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 "The Early Show" ...

  • 'Perversion files' show locals helped cover up

    On June 14, 2012, following a civil trial, the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that decades of the Boy Scouts’ confidential files would be made public. They would first need to allow the Scouts and plaintiffs’ attorneys time to redact the files of sensitive information. Given a months-long head start, editor Terry Petty and reporter Nigel Duara began the process of negotiating the unredacted files from a longtime source. The negotiations took two months and required the guarantee of an embargo. In August, they received a CD with 20,000 pages of perversion files. Duara and Petty combed through the files, looking for patterns. The Scouts’ concealment of the abuse has been reported before, beginning with an exhaustive series in the early 1990s from the Washington Times. But the AP team found something else: Locals helped. County attorneys, newspaper editors, mayors and police officers were all detailed in the files helping keep the Scouts’ name out of charging documents and off the front page. Indeed, a local county attorney proudly reported to Scouts leaders that he quashed an investigation in which a man confessed to sexually abusing two brothers “to protect the name of Scouting.”

    Tags: Boy scouts; abuse; record

    By Nigel Duara; Terry Petty

    Associated Press

    2012

  • KSHB: Questionable Contracts

    A 41 Action News investigation scrutinized the bidding process for a $32 million energy project with Kansas City Public Schools. The investigation revealed that a businessman who acted an unpaid adviser early in the process eventually founded his own company and won the lucrative contract. The reporting lead to a resignation by a high-ranking district leader and a canceled contract. The ongoing investigation later examined other contracts and discovered a district facilities manager had helped award millions of dollars of work to a company with whom he had a personal relationship. That part of the investigation showed the district did not have a conflict of interest policy in place for district employees.

    Tags: broadcast; public schools; personal relationship; corruption; bidding process

    By Ryan Kath, Investigative Reporter; Melissa Greenstein, Executive Producer; Andy Pollard, Photojournalist/Editor; Michael Butler, Photojournalist/Editor

    KSHB-TV (Kansas City

    2012

  • Inside Track

    The Wall Street Journal staff exposed how new ways of insider trading have corrupted the U.S. financial, corporate, and political worlds, having enormous impact in the process. The article shows how well-connected investors managed to gain an advantage by getting early clues to the Federal Reserve's forthcoming policy moves, as well as to important legislation from Washington lawmakers.

    Tags: Wall Street; insider trading; washington; lawmaker; federal reserve

    By Susan Pulliam, Brody Mullins, Michael Rothfeld, Jenny Strasberg, Steve Eder

    Wall Street Journal (New York)

    2011

  • The Mahoney Scandal: Fall from Grace

    This story uncovered how Florida Rep. Tim Mahoney had secretly paid a former staffer - and one-time mistress - $120,000 and promised her a job at a Democratic media firm to stave off a sexual harassment lawsuit against him. Further reporting also found that Mahoney had gone to great lengths to help another former mistress - a county emergency response official in her district - win a grant from FEMA. The report shows how Democratic leadership was aware of problems with Mahoney's conduct as early as September and encouraged him to deal with the situation.

    Tags: FEMA; government corruption; illicit affairs; illegal settlements; sweetheart deals; sex scandal

    By Emma Schwartz; Vic Walter; Rhonda Schwartz; Maddy Sauer; Megan Churchmach; Brian Ross

    ABC News

    2008

  • Teens and Strangers

    Children are taught to avoid strangers and dangerous situations, and should have these lessons ingrained by the time they are teenagers. The Early Show drove around in a van, attempting to lure teenagers - including students at Princeton University- into the car to find out just how well those lessons are learned, and how easy or difficult it would be to get a teenager to exhibit poor judgment. Using cover stories including being a film crew seeking young people for a commercial, and posing as a police officer, the show lured people into the van.

    Tags: abduction; kidnapping; strangers; lure; The Early Show

    By Susan Koeppen; Robert Powell; Michael Bass; Bob Davis

    CBS The Early Show

    2006

  • The Hundred Year Lie: How Food and Medicine are Destroying Your Health

    This book "shatters dozens of myths being perpetuated by the chemical, pharmaceutical, and processed foods industries. It shows how early advances led to a buildup of industry, and how the profit motive then led companies and even our own government to ignore troubling signs of widespread illness and disease.

    Tags: health sciences; nutrition; chemicals; public health; FDA; toxins

    By Randall Fitzgerald

    Dutton (Penguin Putnam Inc., New York)

    2006

  • After dust settles, workers pay with their lives

    The reporters investigated genuine concerns over the effect of asbestos exposure at a now defunct factory that produced asbestos cement pipe. Of the fewer than 300 workers that worked there over the factory's existence, 11 died of mesothelioma, five of lung cancer, and eight more died after suffering with severe asbestosis. Most died in their 50's or early 60's. At least 4 more are fighting for their lives and dozens more are suffering with asbestosis. Alabama state laws require workers seeking compensation to file their claims within two years of exposure,although asbestosis usually takes several years to show up. Reporters also examined the problems of workers at other companies that protected themselves by declaring bankruptcy or moving out of state, leaving the victims with little hope of legal redress.

    Tags: asbestos; legal liability; acute respiratory illness; Capco; cement-asbestos pipe; mesothelioma; libel; FOIA; industrial safety; health

    By Thomas Spencer;Jeff Hansen;Joe Songer;Kim Bryan

    The Birmingham News

    2005

  • "Travel Scams"

    The Early Show bought a vacation package they received by fax. They filmed their vacation and found they did not receive promised activities, their five-star hotel was a dump, they were charged high-season premiums even though they were traveling in an off-season month. The Florida Better Business Bureau said the travel company that arranged the trip had a long list of unanswered complaints.

    Tags: Travel; fraud; vacations; scams; overcharges

    By Susan Koeppen;Robert Powell;Michael Bass

    CBS News

    2005

  • "Lost Kids"

    Child safety advocates say that a child is lost in the U.S. every 40 seconds. It often takes hours for them to be found and reunited with a parent. The Early Show did an experiment with a child actor in a New York City park and found that more people stopped to help a lost dog than a lost child. Experts say people are often afraid to approach strange children in public for fear of being misidentified as paedophiles.

    Tags: Child safety; abductions; ID tags; day-care safety

    By Susan Koeppen;Robert Powell

    CBS News

    2005

  • Backover Dangers

    The Early Show demonstrates the blind spots that many family vehicles have,vehicles such as SUV's, pick-up trucks, and minivans. One man is interviewed who killed his own two-year-old son by backing into him, completely unaware the boy was there. Safety experts say a child is killed in this manner every week in the US, and there are several new safety devices to prevent such accidents.

    Tags: car safety; accidents; child safety; new safety devices; cameras; Consumer Reports

    By Susan Koeppen;Robert Powell

    CBS The Early Show

    2004