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 "mystery" ...
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A Lingering Mystery: Arizona ranked 3rd in country for number of human remains that are unidentified
The story uses data scraped from a federal database called NamUs to rank the number of unidentified remains in the country by state. Research into the matter shows Arizona's number is so high because of deaths on the border.
Tags: unidentified remains; deaths
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The Clarks: An American Story
The Huguette Clark story began as a feature, a tale of mystery. Investigative reporter Bill Dedman began with a simple question: Why are the mansions of one of America's richest women sitting vacant? The result morphed into a breaking story, spawning criminal investigation by the Manhattan district attorney and most recently the U.S. attorney's office.
Tags: Hugette Clark; mansion; William Clark; fortune; wealth
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What's killing their children?
A 19 ACTION NEWS Investigation lasting an entire year expose a cancer cluster killing children in Clyde, Ohio. The federal EPA has now started their own investigation after 19 ACTION NEWS and viewers demanded that the U.S. government step in to help solve this deadly mystery. The federal investigation comes after five years of the state of Ohio failing to find a cause of what has killed six children with more than 30 kids diagnosed with cancer.
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Unraveling the Mysteries of Degas' Sculpture
ARTnews covered a controversy regarding a set of plaster sculptures described by a group of dealers as "recently discovered" works by famed artist Edward Degas and discovered there was no way that these pieces could be considered genuine.
Tags: Art; Edward Degas
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Solving A 1964 Cold Case: Mystery of Frank Morris
This investigation, partnered with the Concordia Sentinel, CBC Radio and NPR digs into the cold case of Frank Morris, thought to be murdered by Ku Klux Klan members, all for refusing to work on a deputy sheriff's cowboy boots.
Tags: Cold case project; KKK; multimedia
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Murder Mysteries
Scripps Howard developed a computer algorithim that can identify suspicious clusters of homicides of women that have a significant chance of containing serial murders.
Tags: serial killer; murder; victim; demographic; offenders
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The Mysterious Case of Kevin Ku
The story reports on Kevin Xu -- a Chinese national who was cuaght trying to sell fake drugs to undercover immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and FDA agents in 2007.
Tags: Intellgectual Property Rights Coordination Center; IPRCC; Kevin Xu; FDA; ICE; Immigration and Customs Enforcement
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Who Killed Leon Jordan?
The story investigates Kansas City's longest running murder mystery -- the unsolved assassination of politician and civil rights leader Leon Jordan. The newspaper found that not only did the police lose the murder weapon, but they later recovered it in the trunk of one of their own police cars.
Tags: Leon Jordan; murder mystery; murder weapon; murder
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Murder Mysteries
Using state and local Freedom of Information laws, Scripps Howard News Service conducted the most complete accounting ever of homicide victims in the United States. This includes 15,322 kilings never reported to the FBI.
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Murder Mysteries
Schripps Howard News Service has conducted the most complete accounting ever made of homicide victims in the United States. Aggressive use of state and local Freedom of Information laws allowed the wire service to assemble a database of 525,742 homicides, including records of 15,322 killings never reported to the FBI. The "Murder Mysteries" project calculated the homicide clearance rate for every police department in the U.S., prompting four departments to promise reforms. Scripps also developed an algorithm that identified 161 suspicious clusters of unsolved homicides involving women of similar age killed through similar means. Authorities in Gary, Ind., and Youngstown, Ohio, Launched new investigations into possible serial murder in their communities as a result of this project.
Tags: Murder; mystery; FBI; homicide; killings; serial killer; police department; investigation; FOI; algorithm; computer-assisted reporting;