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 "drug addicts" ...

  • A story of hope, and a lopsided deal

    A six-month Boston Globe investigation revealed that a contractor from California was repeatedly employing impoverished, drug-addicted men from an evangelical church to renovate hotels across the country. The story started in Boston, where reporter Casey Ross discovered that the contractor, Installations Plus, was paying illegally low wages to workers trucked up from Victory Outreach Church in Philadelphia. He also traced the illegal behavior to other Massachusetts communities and then to California, where he spent several days tracking down Victory Outreach members who recalled working for the contractor in that state. The result of his reporting was a richly detailed narrative that took readers into a little-known corner of America’s underground economy. After the story’s publication, the state of Massachusetts announced an effort to strengthen labor enforcement against companies that fund and manage projects where significant violations are found. In addition, California labor officials initiated an investigation into the employment practices of Installations Plus.

    Tags: Economy; low wages; contractor; workers

    By Reporter Casey Ross; Editors Andrew Caffrey; Shirley Leung; Mark Morrow

    Boston Globe

    2012

  • Dirty Money

    Some law enforcement agencies have become addicted to seizing drug money. This story found:</p> <p>*Police agencies are seizing bulk cash from drivers and alleging it's drug money without finding any drugs, or, in many cases, without ever filing criminal money laundering charges.</p> <p>* Underfunded, usually rural police and prosecutor's offices have become dependent on seizing suspected drug money to carry out the basic functions of their offices, a state of affairs specifically discouraged by federal asset forfeiture laws.</P> <p>* In the extreme, some corrupt police forces are setting up "forfeiture traps," reminiscent of small-town speed traps, to catch suspected drug couriers and take their currency, a practice some attorneys call "highway robbery"</p> <p>* Some sheriff's departments have become more interested in confiscating cash than drugs, i.d. working southbound lanes into Mexico -- "our piggybank," one South Texas sheriff told me -- where they're more likely to catch money couriers. The reporters also found that these departments are not interested in investigating the couriers as a way to disrupt cartel activities -- all they're interested in is seizing the cash.</p> <p>* With little oversight built into state or federal asset forfeiture laws, some prosecutors' office are misspending their seized drug funds on things like margarita machines for the annual picnic and soccer uniforms for the police soccer team.</p> <p>* More and more law enforcement agencies are taking advantage of the "piggy banks" on their highways. According to the US Justice Department, in the past four years seized assets tripled from $567 million to $1.6 billion.</p>

    Tags: Drug enforcement; seizure of money; US Justice Department; radio; forfeiture traps

    By John Burnett; Marisa Penaloza; Quinn O'Toole; Tanya Ballard Brown

    National Public Radio

    2008

  • A Girl's Life

    The single 7,500-word story chronicled the life and death of Acia Johnson, a South Boston girl who seemed to be doing everything right: getting good grades in school, becoming a standout basketball player with a chance at a scholarship to go to a good high school and taking care of her younger sister. That was until her house was set ablaze last April in what authorities said was a jealous rage by her mother's lover. Acia burned to death along with her three-year-old sister in her third-floor bedroom closet. Her mother stood, safe, on the ground with the family dog. Her father was in jail. It was the last in a long list of instances of neglect recounted in the story. Anyone could have saved her life--her parents, drug addicts and sometimes violent petty criminals who never managed to get straight' neighbors who knew about the violent family fights and often didn't call police; friends who did nothing though thought it unusual that Acia was left to care for her sister while their parents were out running thr streets; social workers who had declared Acia's parents unfit in 2003 and placed her in the custody of her grandmother but who never figured out that she was still living with her mother. They didn't figure it out even though they frequently visited Acia at her mother's house, including two days before the fire. They didn't figure it out even though her mother reported Acia was living with her when she applied for housing subsidies, food stamps and cash assistance. And they didn't figure it out even though her mother's house was listed as Acia's primary residence at her middle school.

    Tags: social workers; arson; child death; neglect; custody; Boston

    By Keith O'Brien; Donovan Slack

    Boston Globe

    2008

  • The New Addiction

    Nevada per capita are the nation's number one users of hydrocodone, the narcotic in Vicodin and Lortab. The amount of painkiller abuse in the state was found after analyzing the Drug Enforcement Administration's controlled substance database.

    Tags: prescription drugs; medicine; pharmaceuticals; methadone; oxycodone; DEA;

    By Marshall Allen; Alex Richards

    Sun (Las Vegas, Nev.)

    2009

  • Coming Home: Soldiers and Drugs

    The ABC News investigation probed into the use of illicit drugs by former soldiers after returning home from war in Iraq. Though the military suggests there is no increase in drug abuse after serving in the war, an ABC News team along with six graduate student journalists set out to talk to soldiers for answers. The team traveled to Fort Bragg, NC, Camp Pendelton, CA and Fort Carson, CO to speak with soldiers.

    Tags: post-war trauma; illegal drugs; addiction; medication

    By Brian Roiss Rhonda Schwartz; Joseph Rhee; Simon Surowicz; Krista Kjellman

    ABCNews.com

    2007

  • Methadone Clinics

    WCAU-TV "documented drug dealing going on right in front of a drug rehabilitation clinic in Pennsylvania" where a patients are treated with liquid methadone. "There's evidence some patients at this clinic and across the state ...are selling their doses to addicts on the street."

    Tags: drugs; addiction; liquid methadone; drug dealing; rehabilitation; clinics; state government; death; health;

    By Lu Ann Cahn; Dave Bentley; Ed Dress

    WCAU-TV (Philadelphia)

    2007

  • Fentanyl - Fatal Euphoria

    This special section traces the drug fentanyl from a chemist in Mexico City to dope houses, morgues and the homes of grieving families all over the US, but especially in Detroit. The reporters used medical examiner records and interviews with street addicts to show that drugs like fentanyl are not only problems of the inner city; victims come from diverse social and professional backgrounds.

    Tags: drugs; addiction; FOIA; mapping; heroin

    By Jim Schaefer; Joe Swickard; Romain Blanquart; Victoria Turk

    Detroit Free Press

    2007

  • The "Bupe" Fix

    "This three-part, multimedia series examined the U.S. government's role in helping to bring the drug buprenorphine to market as a treatment for addiction to heroin and other narcotics and the consequences of those decisions. The series found that the drug, though widely hailed by many specialists in the field as a highly effective treatment, is beginning to cause the sorts of problems it was intended to displace."

    Tags: heroin; addiction; buprenorphine; drugs; narcotics; drug abuse

    By Fred Schulte; Doug Donovan; Erika Niedowski

    Baltimore Sun

    2007

  • The Battle Within

    After six years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, an all-volunteer Army is sending the same soldiers back again and again, sometimes despite medical findings that they are unfit for battle. Thousands are depending on prescription drugs, including antidepressants, to get through repeated trips to war, and some have died while taking multiple combination of drugs to treat combat stress and other war-related injuries. Suicides in Iraq and Afghanistan tripled from 2004 to 2007, and some of those who killed themselves were sent back to war with antidepressants.

    Tags: military; combat fatigue; prescription drugs; suicides; drug addictions

    By Erin Emery; David Olinger

    Denver Post

    2008

  • Prescription Privacy

    In Indianapolis and all over the nation, drug stores were found to be violating state and federal laws by disposing of customers' legally-protected health records improperly. Some drug stores were just throwing away health records into dumpsters, where it could be accessed by anyone that would care to look in there.

    Tags: Margie Kerr; drug store; medication; pills; pharmacy; pharmacies; drug addict; health record

    By Bob Segall; Bill Ditton; Jim Hall; Gerry Lanosga; Holly Stephen

    WTHR-TV (Indianapolis)

    2006