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 "violent crimes" ...

  • Crime Data Investigation

    The initial story in the crime data investigation found that from 2009 to early 2012 the Milwaukee Police Department misreported more than 500 aggravated assaults as lesser offenses not counted in the city’s violent crime tally. More than 800 additional cases followed the same pattern but couldn’t be verified with available records. Subsequent stories found police underreported aggravated assaults even when their own officers were severely injured; police clerks routinely changed dangerous weapon codes to generic ones in a way that allowed violent assaults to be underreported — and escape FBI scrutiny; the FBI’s crime auditing process is a fig leaf — metro police departments are rarely audited, and even then the sample sizes are too small to draw meaningful conclusions; Milwaukee police knew they misreported rapes and robberies, but didn’t mention this to city leaders or the public; high-ranking department officials raised red flags internally for years that there were problems but the public only heard a drumbeat that crime was down. In addition to these major installments, Poston and Diedrich wrote nearly two dozen follow-up stories that documented the fallout.

    Tags: Crime data; police; assaults; city government

    By Ben Poston; John Diedrich

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

    2012

  • Spa shooter sidestepped police

    Following a mass shooting inside a suburban Milwaukee spa, reporters John Diedrich and Gina Barton dug into the history of shooter Radcliffe Haughton with police in his community of Brown Deer. They uncovered a series of failures by police that left a dangerous man on the street, emboldening him to become more violent. Let down by police, Zina Haughton sought protection with a restraining order. She was dead days after it was issued. Diedrich and Barton found Brown Deer did not follow the state’s mandatory arrest law in such cases and failed to uphold its most basic duty: protecting the public. The most remarkable finding was that Brown Deer police actually retreated from a standoff with Haughton even though officers had saw him point what appeared to be a rifle at his wife. The police chief was defiant. Elected officials in Brown Deer deferred to the chief, who operates with little oversight in the village, the reporters found. The case revealed a loophole in state’s domestic violence laws: No one could hold local police accountable for failing to follow the law as designed by legislators. Data reporter Ben Poston joined the effort to examine how many domestic violence cases referred to prosecutors result in charges, thus holding other parts of the criminal justice system accountable.

    Tags: Milwaukee; shooting; gun; murder; police; crime

    By John Diedrich; Gina Barton; Ben Poston

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

    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

  • The High Costs of Wrongful Convictions

    A seven-month investigation by the Better Government Association and the Center on Wrongful Convictions reveals the wrongful convictions of 85 men and women for violent crimes in Illinois has cost taxpayers more than $214 million, and imprisoned innocent people for more than 900 years. Meanwhile, the real perpetrators committed nearly 100 felonies.

    Tags: Better Government Association; Center on Wrongful Convictions

    By John Conroy, Rob Warden

    Better Government Association

    2011

  • America's War Within

    America's War Within, led by the Center for Investigative Reporting, deeply examined the first 10 years of the war on terror. There were several findings stemming from work conducted throughout the year. First, a little-known but costly intelligence arm of the Department of Homeland Security did not meaningfully contribute to the war on terror and instead generated reams of "intelligence spam." Second, a private counterterrorism team at the Mall of America ensnared innocent shoppers by reporting them to authorities for "suspicious activity," part of a national initiative promoted by the federal government to college and analyze threat intelligence, much of which has dubious value. Third, local police around the country have stockpiled combat-style equipment with the help of some $34 billion in federal homeland security grants contributing to a "militarization" of law enforcement, even though violent crime is dropping and terrorist attacks are rare.

    Tags: terrorism; violence; grants; Department of Homeland Security

    By Andrew Becker; G.W. Schulz; Daniel Zwerdling; Margot Williams

    Center for Investigative Reporting

    2011

  • The Unexpected Guest; Friends with Benefits

    First and only full account of the crimes of violent River Oaks con-man Dinesh Shaw a.k.a Dinny Shaw.

    Tags: Murder; Con Man

    By John Nova Lomax

    Village Voice Media/Houston Press

    2011

  • Gangs

    The newspaper revealed that violent gangs were expanding their crime enterprises from urban neighborhoods to typically peaceful Tennessee suburbs and small towns.

    Tags: : gangs; crime; suburbs; drug deal; street violence

    By Brad Schrade; Chris Echegaray; John Partipilo

    Tennessean (Nashville

    2010

  • Secret early release of Illinois prisoners

    The series finds that the Illinois state government had secretly released 1,700 inmates from prison early in an attempt to save money and reduce overcrowding. Many of those released had committed violent crimes or been convicted of driving under the influence.

    Tags: prison; state prison; criminals; meritorious good time; Department of Corrections

    By John O'Connor

    Associated Press

    2010

  • True Crime

    This story examines the "real impact of crime in Memphis-the city often rated as the Most Violent and most crime-ridden in America in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports". This series was built off of a never before created database, which held every criminal arrest made in Memphis in the past 10 years. It consisted of "about 1 million records from the past decade".

    Tags: law enforcement; criminal; police department; statistics; records; victims; crime-ridden; violence; neighborhoods

    By Marc Perrusquia; Kristina Goetz; Zack McMillin; Cindy Wolff

    Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.)

    2009

  • Gangs in St. Louis

    KTVI looked at the gangs in St.Louis and found that they were fighting over neighborhoods, not colors.

    Tags: gangs; urban; St. Louis; Missouri; neighborhood; violent crime

    By Chris Hayes; Larry Washington; Greg Gibson

    KTVI-TV (St. Louis)

    2007