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 "train" ...

  • Patient Safety Crisis at Parkland

    This investigation takes a look at Parkland Memorial Hospital, which mostly treats Dallas' most vulnerable patients, the poor and the elderly. The findings are shocking and extensive, including patient neglect, unsupervised practices from doctors in training and poorly trained psychiatric technicians.

    Tags: hospitals; psychiatric care; patient neglect

    By Brooks Egerton; Miles Moffeit; Reese Dunklin; Ryan McNeil; Daniel Lathrop; Sue Goetinck Ambrose; Sherry Jacobson; Maud Beelman; Doug Swanson

    Dallas Morning News

    2011

  • The Gravy Train

    An in-depth look at the New Orleans Public Belt Railroad revealed $100,000 of questionable purchases on the general manager's public credit card and a blatant disregard for state and city public bid laws.

    Tags: railroad; bid laws; spending; taxpayer; public entity; New Orleans

    By Lee Zurik; Donny Pearce; greg Phillips; Mikel Schaefer

    WVUE-TV (New Orleans)

    2010

  • Councilmen on Tourism

    The RBS-TV news crew followed city council members from seven Brazilian states as they attended 6 training courses over 40 days. They found that many of them enjoyed tourist day trips instead of the courses they were supposed to be attending. They also found that the politicians could purchase certificates of completion even when they did not attend the courses.

    Tags: Brazil; city government; city council; fraud; tax dollars; abuse of power;

    By Giovani Grizotti; Ciancarlo Barzi; Jefferson Pacheco; Luciano Luccas; Dimitri Caldeira; Lairssa Bitencourt

    RBS-TV/Globo TV (Brazil)

    2010

  • Flying Cheap

    The February 2009 crash of Continental Flight 3407 revealed "a little-known trend in the airline industry: major airlines have outsourced more and more of their flights to obscure regional carriers." These smaller carriers operate with different safety practices with pilots that are often paid less, with less training and fewer flight hours.

    Tags: airlines; aviation safety; Federal Aviation Administration; flight safety; transportation

    By Rick Young, Catherine Rentz; Miles O'Brien; Penny Trams; Peter Pearce; Fritz Kramer; Charles Lewis; Wendell Cochran; Jacob Fenton; Russ Choma; Will Cummings; Morgan Halvorsen; Ethan Klapper; Mia Steinle; Alex Thompson; LeeSandre Alexandre; David Fanning; Michael Sullivan; Raney Aronson-Rath

    Frontline

    2010

  • "Deaths at the State Hospital"

    This ongoing investigation reveals major misconduct by the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo, the largest public psychiatric hospital in the state. The investigative team exposed and detailed the deaths of four patients that resulted from the "mistakes, lack of training, incompetence and possible criminal neglect" carried out by hospital employees. The series also reveals the attempt of state human services officials to cover up the mistakes.

    Tags: mental health; patients; grand jury; DA; Pueblo; Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment; database; Pueblo State Hospital; Nexis-Lexis; 441.com; CoCourts.com; Colorado Bureau of Investigation

    By John Ferrugia; Jeff Harris; Arthur Kane; Tom Burke; Jason Foster; Brad Bogott

    KMGH-TV (Denver)

    2010

  • "Derailed - A Star Tribune Speical Report"

    The Star Tribune and ProPublica revealed that the nation's "second-largest railroad company," Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway (BNSF), has gone to great lengths to cover up its legal mishaps and wrongdoings. In addition to losing evidence, the company and its lawyers worked to gain "unfair advantage "over opponents in "more than 20 court cases."

    Tags: railroad; BNSF; FOI; trains; crash

    By Paul McEnroe; Tony Kennedy; Paul Levy; Richard Meryhew; Sharona Coutts; Lisa Schwartz; Kitty Bennett

    The Star-Tribune (Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN)

    2010

  • The Radiation Boom

    The reporter provides insight into the medical community's inadequate safety protections. Within these hospitals, the reporter documents the number of patients burned by the radiation of new machines, little government oversight,poorly trained personnel, and outdated equipment.

    Tags: radiation; hospital; technology; FDA; overdoses

    By Walt Bogdanich

    New York Times

    2010

  • Could Sandy Hill Have Been Saved?

    This series looked at why fire-and-rescue workers were unable to save a woman trapped inside her home even though she was on the phone with a dispatcher giving directions to her upstairs bedroom. The reporting found that volunteers who responded that night did not use thermal imaging equipment that could have helped them find the victim, Sandy Hill; that they did not place a ladder at either of the windows in her bedroom; that they were slow to ventilate the house and remove the smoke that killed her; and that they did not question people who had escaped the house about her location. Additional reporting exposed systemic weaknesses in Spotsylvania's fire-and-rescue services, which rely on self-governing volunteer departments and a smaller number of career personnel hired and directed by the county. These weaknesses include a poorly structured chain of command, lack of communication, insufficient training for man volunteers, and a failure to enforce existing regulations due in large part to friction between the career and volunteer units.

    Tags: Firefighters; Fire Department; asphyxiation; volunteer; equipment; protocol; Spotsylvania; fire-and-rescue; training; regulation

    By Don Telvock; Amy Flowers Umble

    Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg, Va.)

    2010

  • Failure of Justice

    The failed investigation of a police imposter who sexually assaulted at least 15 Apache teenagers serves as a window into the breakdown of law enforcement in Indian country. Native Americans suffer from disproportionate crime rates - especially sexual assaults - largely because of a dysfunctional criminal justice system. In this case, two men were falsely arrested and jailed; the real criminal got away and victims saw no justice. The government's own records, obtained through a federal lawsuit, demonstrate that the problem is systemic - a result of overlapping jurisdictions, mismanagement, lack of funding inadequate training and multiple other flaws.

    Tags: Law Enforcement; Native American; Justice; Jurisdiction; Sexual Assault; Rape; Police; Imposter; Apache; Whiteriver; Indian Reservation

    By Dennis Wagner

    Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

    2010

  • First, Do No Harm

    This investigation focused on lax supervision of doctors-in-training, patient harm and alleged billing fraud at Dallas' premier medical school complex and its primary teaching hospital, which are financed largely by taxpayers. It also examined more broadly questions about medical training, patient care and healthcare fraud at teaching hospitals around the United States.

    Tags: doctor training; patient harm; patient care; Medicare fraud; health care; healthcare; Dallas; medical school; hospital; billing fraud; surgery

    By Maud Beelman; Sue Goetinck Ambrose; Reese Dunklin; Brooks Egerton; Miles Moffeit; Mona Reeder

    Dallas Morning News

    2010