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 "electronics" ...

  • Cracking the Codes

    Cracking the Codes documented how thousands of medical professionals have steadily billed Medicare for more complex and costly health care over the past decade – adding $11 billion or more to their fees – despite little evidence elderly patients required more treatment. The series also uncovered a broad range of costly billing errors and abuses that have plagued Medicare for years – from confusion over how to pick proper payment codes to apparent overcharges in medical offices and hospital emergency rooms. The findings strongly suggest these problems, known as “upcoding,” are worsening amid lax federal oversight and the government-sponsored switch from paper to electronic medical records.

    Tags: Medicare; health care; billing; medical offices; hospitals; government; medical records

    By Fred Schulte; Joe Eaton

    Center for Public Integrity (Washington, D.C.)

    2012

  • Detroit Free Press: Free to Kill

    “Free to Kill,” a seven-month Detroit Free Press investigation, found the Michigan Department of Corrections failed to properly supervise some of the most violent of the state’s roughly 70,000 offenders under its watch. A total of 88 parolees and probationers were suspected, arrested or convicted in 95 murders between Jan. 1, 2010, and Aug. 31, 2011. The number nearly doubled from 2010 to 2011 -- from 21 to 38. The series also revealed that dozens of offenders weren't outfitted with court-ordered electronic tethers, and others weren't sent back to prison for new crimes or failed drug tests.

    Tags: Department of Corrections; violence; criminals; drug tests

    By L.L. Brasier; Gina Damron

    Detroit Free Press

    2012

  • Port Authority: Battle at the Waterfront

    This investigation was about lies and obfuscation, and the stakes were enormous: A mayor’s election, a growing media empire and potentially billions of dollars in development. Our reporting revealed how within months of purchasing the largest media operation in San Diego County, the new owners of U-T San Diego were using their power and status to influence -- and even threaten -- government officials into helping them realize lucrative plans for developing the downtown waterfront. It also illuminated an insidious practice suspected nationwide: use of private electronic accounts to conduct the public’s business. Our reporting defined much of the discussion around the mayor’s race in the weeks before the election. In the end, the candidate at the heart of the probed was defeated.

    Tags: Mayoral election; fraud; government officials; San Diego

    By Brooke Williams; Brad Racino, Investigative Newsource; Joanne Faryon; Amita Sharma, KPBS

    Investigative Newsource

    2012

  • "Breaking Down Bond Court"

    In Cook Country, very little attention is given to bond hearings. However, the hearings can have a major impact on the defendant's life and "have ripple effects for taxpayers and communities." In this story, reporters Tony Arnold and Cate Cahan reveal "rushed hearings," the errors that occur and the "drastic consequences" they have for the defendants and their families.

    Tags: bond; bail; Cook County; Chicago; judge; electronic monitoring; lawsuit

    By Tony Arnold; Cate Cahan

    WBEZ Radio (Chicago)

    2010

  • "Electronic Health Records: Will They Be Safer and Save Money?"

    In this yearlong, multimedia project, reporters Schulte and Schwartz investigated the shift of paper medical records to electronic records. The report drew attention to the "challenges officials are facing in computerizing" the records. Some of the challenges include concerns of privacy and patient well-being.

    Tags: records; MAUDE; FDA; Center for Devices and Radiological Health; database

    By Fred Schulte; Emma Schwartz

    Huffington Post Investigative Fund

    2010

  • The Blowout

    Three-and-a-half weeks after the Deepwater Horizon blowout, 60 Minutes gave an accurate depiction of what happened. Michael Williams, the rig's chief electronics technician, described key events he had witnessed in the weeks leading up to the disaster.

    Tags: Deepwater Horizon; blowout; oil rig; accident reports; oil drilling; environmental disaster

    By Scott Pelley; Michael Radutzky; Graham Messick; Solly Granatstein

    CBS News 60 Minutes

    2010

  • Runaway Toyotas

    Toyota has recently been in the news following “hundreds of owners having their vehicles suddenly accelerating out of control”. The investigation revealed “over two thousand cases of runaway Toyotas and Lexus cars, including reports of 200 accidents and 16 deaths”. Toyota blamed many of these accidents on the floor mat becoming stuck under the gas pedal and this was the cause of the acceleration.

    Tags: automobiles; electronic computer system; safety; highway; drivers; manufacturers; transportation

    By Brian Ross; Joseph Rhee; Angela M. Hill; Asa Eslocker; Karen Brenner; Roy Garlisi; Megan Chuchmach; Rhonda Schwartz

    ABC News

    2009

  • Trouble in the Walls: Contaminated Chinese Drywall

    Drywall from China, which has been contaminated, could become one of the” largest consumer disasters in US history”. Gases being released from the drywall are “corroding wires, air conditioners and shorting out electronics, and suspected of causing health problems like severe headaches, respiratory ailments, asthma attacks and nosebleeds”. Many homeowners can’t afford to move and would never be able to sell their homes, so they are trapped with nowhere to turn.

    Tags: houses; housing; gypsum board; wallboard; housing market; government; health officials; families; construction; building

    By Aaron Kessler

    Herald-Tribune (Sarasota, Fla.)

    2009

  • China's Cyber Militia: Congress in the Cyber-Crosshairs

    "This series focused on the threat of 'cyber' espionage against the U.S. government and U.S. corporations, as well as electronic interference with U.S. infrastructure, all by Chinese authorities or groups believed to be working under their auspices."

    Tags: hack; cybercrime; hacking; China; online security; cyber-security;

    By Shane Harris; Bruce Stokes;

    National Journal

    2008

  • The Wasteland

    CBS News found that when well-meaning American consumers give their electronics to so-called recyclers, the waste is often smuggled to China and other parts of the Third World, where it is broken down or melted for the precious metals inside. They investigated a major electronic waste recycler in the Denver area, Executive Recycling, and tracked a container that had been filled with cathode ray tubes at the company's loading docks. They followed this container from Denver, to the port of Tacoma, to Hong Kong, which is the main entryway to the part of southern China where electronic waste is broken down in the worst conditions. There, seven out of ten kids have dangerous levels of lead in their blood. Pregnancies are six times more likely to end in miscarriage. The reporters also went to China and found that wasteland, where workers were cooking circuit boards over open flames and separating the gold from other metals in acid baths on the edge of a river. While filming, the crew was attacked by a gang that protects this gray market enterprise. Back in Denver, CBS News confronted the CEO of Executive Recycling. He denied that his company had sent the CRTs overseas, but the evidence was all but irrefutable.

    Tags: recycling; gray market; electronics; China; worker safety; pollution;

    By Scott Pelley; Solly Granatstein; Nicole Young; Lamy Li; Kevin Livelli; Brad Simpson; David Lom; Tom Honeysett

    CBS News

    2008