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 "court documents" ...

  • Record Document ICE Cover-Up

    The story documents how Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials attempted to cover-up a wave of immigration court cases dismissals in Houston in the fall of 2010.

    Tags: ICE; Immigration and Customs Enforcement; cover-up

    By Susan Carroll

    Houston Chronicle

    2011

  • "Greed v. Guardianship"

    This investigation reveals serious flaws in the Maricopa County Probate Court. Families have complained of being "violated" by their court appointed guardian, which was most often the Sun Valley Group. Families accused SVG of taking control of their finances, selling anything of value and keeping the money. Some were even kept from visiting sick loved ones who had been placed in care facilities.

    Tags: Sun Valley Group; probate court; Maricopa County; Arizona Supreme Court; public records; court documents; guardianship

    By Maria Tomasch; Joe Ducey; Aaron Wische; Vivek Narayan; Matthew Anzur; Patrick Lancaster

    KNXV-TV (Phoenix)

    2010

  • Justice in the Balance

    The investigation documents the occurrences of federal prosecutors violating the law to win cases while the Justice Department looks the other way. Rarely are the prosecutors punished, and often times their abuses set guilty people free and put innocent people in jail.

    Tags: Justice Department; prosecutor; federal prosecutor; violation; federal court

    By Brad Heath; Kevin McCoy

    USA Today (McLean, Va.)

    2010

  • Barry Minkow 2.0

    The LA Weekly found that Barry Minkow was duping investors for the second time, while the media looked the other way. Using thousands of pages of court documents, public companies' financial reports, and real estate records, the Weekly discovered a pattern of Minkow shortening stocks his Fraud Discovery Institute was about to issue critical reports on, sending the stocks plummeting.

    Tags: Barry Minkow; fraud; extortion; libel; SEC

    By Beth Barrett

    LA Weekly

    2010

  • "The Lost Chalice"

    Author Vernon Silver dives deep into the Italian world of art smuggling. Through court documents and "interviews with modern tomb robbers, smugglers and art dealers," Silver is able to locate a valuable missing vase. The book provides an in-depth look at the world's third largest "underground economy," and how a "network of powerful people and institutions" has been at the center of the "illicit art and cultural property trade."

    Tags: Euphronios; Oxford University; Metropolitan Museum of Art; chalice; Zeus; art smugglers; tomb raiders

    By Vernon Silver

    HarperCollins (New York)

    2009

  • "Court ignores NY rules on filing documents"

    Public access to court documents has been hampered in some areas of New York state. Instead of submitting documents to be formally filed, lawyers passed them "directly to judges' chambers." Consequently, the files never made it to the proper place to be accessible to the public.

    Tags: Monroe County; Office of Court Administration; Monroe County Clerk; Monroe Country Courts

    By David Andreatta

    Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, N.Y.)

    2009

  • "Justice: Delayed, dismissed, denied"

    This series “documented a Philadelphia court system deep in crisis.” The court system has the “nation’s lowest conviction rates, highest fugitives rates, endemic witness intimidation and a failure to punish crimes of gun violence.” To produce these results, the Inquirer conducted data analysis and found the rates from murder, rape, assault, robbery and illegal gun possession.

    Tags: Court system; Murder; Rape; Robbery; Assault; Illegal gun possession; Defendants; Philadelphia; Crime; Violence; Conviction; Justice system

    By Craig R. McCoy; Nancy Phillips; Dylan Purcell; John Sullivan; Emilie Lounsberry

    Philadelphia Inquirer

    2009

  • Above the Law

    "Despite that no one wanted this information revealed, our stories document a disturbing pattern of abuse of power, ethical misconduct and corruption by the Chief Federal Judge of the U.S. District Court of Colorado."

    Tags: witness tampering; perjury; U.S. district court; Colorado; judge; abuse of power; corruption; misconduct; ethics; FOIA

    By Deborah Sherman; Nicole Vap; Patti Dennis; Paula Woodward; Jace Larson; Amy Herdy;

    KUSA-TV (Denver)

    2008

  • Smoke and Mirrors

    "This four-part series documents the slow but complete transformation of the EPA from an agency legally bound to protect and improve the environment to an agency that used an array of political tricks to avoid its Congressional mandate. The series major findings are that the Bush administration appointed an administrator who would do its bidding on behalf of the corporate community; allowed important decisions to languish in the courts, thereby delaying the implementation of various regulations for years; developed a 'voluntary' anti-pollution program that actually rewards polluters; and ignored the science that underpins sound environmental policy."

    Tags: EPA; pollution; Bush administration; environment; regulations; corporate control;

    By John Shiffman; John Sullivan; Tom Avril

    Philadelphia Inquirer

    2008

  • The Grim Sleeper

    Pelisek's story details a secret the Los Angeles police were shielding from the public: "that a serial murderer had begun killing Angelenos since 1985, taking a 13-year hiatus before recently resuming his bloody assaults almost exclusively in a poor, black sector of the city." DNA evidence linked a single killer to several murders of mostly young women, drug users and prostitutes. It was Pelisek that informed families of some of the victims that their daughters' murder was the work of a serial killer.

    Tags: police; serial killer; Los Angeles; body dump; murder; cold case; public records; police documents; court documents

    By Christine Pelisek

    LA Weekly

    2008