The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast. Add to that more than 3,000 tipsheets from our national conferences on how to cover specific beats or do specific stories and you have a resource that no reporter or editor should be without. These stories and tipsheets 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. Logged-in members can view the tipsheets free online:
Search results for "Federal Bureau of investigations" ...
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Check your sources: Figuring out what criminal justice data and documents really say
Gabrielson's tipsheet addresses identifying the shortcomings in data - specifically criminal justice data. Gabrielson points out common mistakes made when using the data, and how to avoid them.
Tags: Uniform Crime Reports; police records; Federal Bureau of Investigations; FBI; clearance rates; clearance rates; conviction rates
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Criminal justice investigations: tips from unexpected people and documents
This tipsheet touches on unexpected people and documents in criminal justice reporting. "Rivalries and jealousies open the door to tips and document leaks for well-positioned reporters." Diedrich details a number of these type of sources and materials.
Tags: crime; justice; police; Federal Bureau of Investigation; probation agents; judges; clerks; convicts; warrants; arrest reports; autopsy records; indictments; trial exhibits
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Cracking the Justice System
McCoy and Purcell discuss the computer-assisted work they did in reporting their series "Justice: Delayed, Dismissed, Denied." They explain the data you should gather when reporting on the courts, and the stories you can find within those numbers.
Tags: courts; crime data; Uniform Crime Report; FBI; Federal Bureau of Investigation;
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Hidden crimes: UCR data, and what’s not there
This tipsheet addresses use of the Uniform Crime Reports, pointing out it "is only as good as the agencies that report data. Police in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Atlanta and St. Louis have been caught hiding crimes to make the cities look safer than they really were." Fazlollah addresses how to spot problems with the data.
Tags: Federal Bureau of investigations; FBI; Uniform Crime Reports; UCR; statistcs; crime reporting; advanced techniques
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Investigating Issues of Race and Poverty
Nixon discusses resources for investigating race and poverty. His list includes the U.S. Census Bureau, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and immigration statistics.
Tags: race; poverty; statistics; data; sources; internet research
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Hospitals and other medical investigations
Brink provides tips on investigating the health care - or lack thereof - provided for female prisoners at the Carswell Federal Medical Center near Fort Worth, Texas, which is the only full-service prison hospital in the country for mentally and chronically ill women convicted of a federal crime. Brink has covered the crimes at this hospital for many years and offers advice to reporters who are undertaking similar projects. En espanol: #2893
Tags: health care; hospitals; hospital prisons; Bureau of Prisons; Carswell Federal Medical Center
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Battling the VA
This tipsheet is a good guide for reporters preparing to investigate the VA. Adams discusses how the agency is structured, as well as what to expect when submitting FOIA requests to the agency. The tipsheet includes information on alternative ways to find VA data, such as specific websites to visit where some of the data is available. The tipsheet ends with an article from the IRE Journal on the same topic.
Tags: veterans; data negotiation; freedom of information; health care; Veterans Health Administration; Veterans Benefits Administration; federal government