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 "pay off" ...

  • ABC News Brian Ross Investigates: Money Trail 2012

    While most of the political press followed the usual rapid spin cycle of the 2012 presidential campaigns, Brian Ross and the ABC News Investigative team instead focused on the corrupting influence of the unprecedented flood of big money on politics, exposing details of Romney’s hidden wealth, ferreting out the identities of secret big money donors and exposing political pay-offs to Obama’s top donors in a series of original investigative reports on ABC World News, Nightline and a year’s worth – more than two dozen front page print stories on ABCNews.com.

    Tags: politics; political press; presidential campaign; Obama; Romney; wealth

    By Chief Investigative Correspondent Brian Ross; Washington Investigative Producer: Matthew Mosk; Investigative Producers: Megan Chuchmach; Cindy Galli; Angela Hill; Chief Investigative Producer: Rhonda Schwartz

    ABC News

    2012

  • The Mafia of Public Job Competitions

    The story shows that investigations for fraud in public job competitions have been carried out in every Brazilian state. Required to join municipal, state and federal institutions, the competitions should be meant to choose the best applicants. However, only those appointed by politicians, and people who pay for a given position, are approved. Making use of a hidden camera, the reporter caught off-guard seven companies that fraud competitions and still approve only applicants appointed by mayors and other officials. Some sell the positions directly to the applicants.

    Tags: international; job; fraud; Brazil; politicians; mayors

    By Reporter and producer Giovani Grizotti; Cinematographers Giancarlo Barzi; Marcelo Theil; and Hálex Vieira; Editors Renato Nogueira Neto; and Alexandre Tandy.

    RBS-TV/Globo TV (Brazil)

    2012

  • Moonlighting deputies funnel cash to sheriff

    Deputies working off-duty paid details at places such as Walgreens and Wal-Mart all pay Sheriff Marlin Gusman one dollar for every hour they work, providing Gusman with about $100,000 in discretionary money each year. Gusman, who often pleads penury in running his office, uses the detail money to throw parties for his staff and hire cheerleaders -- such expenditure is illegal, the Attorney General's Office has opined.

    Tags: deputies; off-duty

    By Matt Davis

    The Lens

    2011

  • Gambling on Growth

    For years, St. Cloud-area cities have used public financing to pay upfront for improving roads and extending water and sewer utilities to new housing developments. Developers were supposed to pay off the debt through assessments, but many are falling behind on payments, leaving cities to bear the cost.

    Tags: Developers; Finance; City Budget; Utilities; Housing; Roads; Funding; Loans; Debt

    By Kirsti Marohn; Lisa Mueller; Britt Johnsen

    St. Cloud (Minn.) Times

    2010

  • Ohio Corrections Connections

    This series found “one of the largest state agencies involved in a pattern of apparent abuse of state tax dollars and power”. This series revealed a number of things, including expensive parties at the taxpayers’ expense while employees were being laid off, friends of officials buying state-made furniture for less than state agencies were paying for it, and firing workers for a number of violations and then hiring them back within weeks or months.

    Tags: corrections officials; Capital; governor; Governor Strickland; corruption; funds; state; economy; government; Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections

    By Paul Aker; Chris Kettler; Joel Chow

    WBNS-TV (Columbus, Ohio)

    2009

  • Durham insider loans pile up

    Tim Durham “is one of Indiana’s highest-profile businesspeople” and appeared to be rising to the top of the super rich. But behind his image, a story of deception and lies is revealed. After an investigation of his company, Fair Finance Co., revealed this deception and he was accused of securities fraud. Also, he was alleged to be using a Ponzi scheme, “using money from new investors to pay off previous purchasers of investment certificates”. Now, Durham and his company face a number of lawsuits.

    Tags: financial; finances; economy; Ohio; securities regulators; business; wealth; investors

    By Greg Andrews

    Business Journal (Indianapolis, IN)

    2009

  • "Unique Approaches to Uncover the Size and Growth of Executive Pay and Pensions"

    While employees throughout the U.S. experienced pay cuts or were laid off, top executives were receiving millions of dollars in bonuses. Reporters Ellen Schultz and Tom McGinty dig deep to find out exactly how extreme those payouts have become.

    Tags: payouts; bonuses; Bank of America; Wells Fargo; Citigroup; executive benefits

    By Ellen E. Schultz; Tom McGinty

    Wall Street Journal (New York)

    2009

  • How the US Funds the Taliban

    This investigation uncovered Taliban insurgents reaping millions of dollars in Department of Defense contracts. "These contracts have become an immense boon for the Taliban, as security firms found that paying off the insurgents was the only way to get supplies through hostile territory to US troops." This has become a large part of the Taliban's income.

    Tags: Department of Defense; US military; logistics; Afghanistan; contracts; NCL Holdings; contractor; government; security official

    By Aram Roston; Betsy Reed; Esther Kaplan

    The Nation

    2009

  • The Credit Trap

    This series ties lax credit card lending and punishing fee practices to the housing boom, to consumers' mounting financial distress, and to the economic downturn. The reports revealed that during the housing boom, banks sharply raised card limits in part because of a surge in home equity, much of it now vanished. Then banks guided borrowers to tap into rising home equity to pay off card balances, putting their homes at risk.

    Tags: credit card; credit card debt; home equity; housing market; economy; rate hikes; mortgages; banking industry; card lenders

    By Kathy Chu; Byron Acohido

    USA Today (McLean, Va.)

    2008

  • Detroit tax breaks go to the well-heeled

    "An obscure, secretive city council entity, the "Hardship Committee," was charged with determining which property-owners were so poor they should be excused from paying all their taxes. But in many cases the breaks meant for the cash-strapped went to the seemingly well-off, including people who drove luxury vehicles, multiple property owners and others who got six-figure home-equity loans. These stories also looked at the members of the committee and found its members were being sued for fraud, had filed for bankruptcy, had a trail of unpaid debts and, in one case, had submitted a false resume."

    Tags: city government; property; taxes; fraud

    By David Josar

    Detroit News

    2007