Sept. 08, 2016
Beat of the Week
(Honorable Mention)
Police Losing Battle to Get Drivers to Put Down Their Phones
for the first major effort by AP to grasp the scope of the texting-while-driving scourge ...
http://abcn.ws/2cIGMin
for the first major effort by AP to grasp the scope of the texting-while-driving scourge ...
http://abcn.ws/2cIGMin
for keeping AP ahead of developments in the fast-changing, highly-competitive Ryan Lochte story. Among the highlights were footage and photos of two of Lochteâs teammates being detained after they were removed from an airplane, and police officials expressing their doubts about Lochteâs account to the AP a day before calling it fabricated. Text: http://summergames.ap.org/article/2-lochte-teammat... Video: http://abcn.ws/2b0ZOua
for obtaining, through an open-records request, exclusive and surprising details about the man charged with killing two Iowa police officers on Nov. 2: He had written a letter days before the shootings referring to police as âabsolute heroes.â http://dmreg.co/2g0u3E8
for strong accountability reporting in showing how police in the Long Island suburb of Brentwood stayed silent about the disappearance of Hispanic teenagers last winter until bodies of the teens began turning up in September. http://bit.ly/2erNMih
for exclusively obtaining documents showing that New York City's newly named top investigator of police misconduct was himself accused of inappropriate workplace behavior, including making a joke about a colleague's backside and referring to an area where Hispanic employees sit as "el Barrio." http://bit.ly/2qKKD4F
for capturing exclusive video of a police van ramming into protesters. Calupitan was able to get to a higher vantage point as tensions rose, allowing him to show the full view of the incident.
Who hasnât glanced out the car window and seen another driver, head down, texting furiously? That was the genesis of a story by Boston-based reporter Denise Lavoie, who took an authoritative nationwide look at the texting-while-driving scourge and law enforcementâs losing battle to stop it.
Lavoie did spot checks with a handful of states around the country, as well as interviews with federal transportation officials and others. Her reporting â APâs first major attempt to grasp the scope of the problem â found that police are fighting a losing battle despite adopting some pretty creative methods to catch serial texters in the act.
for filing a FOIA to force the town of Latta to disclose why the stateâs first female and openly gay sheriff had been suspended for five days. http://bit.ly/2bVpxEm
for being first with a complete story on the tragic case of a mother of an MS-13 victim from Long Island who was struck and killed by an SUV as she was setting up a memorial on the very spot her daughter was killed two years earlier. https://bit.ly/2MQtIEe
for their examination of crime statistics reported to the FBI that revealed that despite the #MeToo movement, police investigations of rape in the U.S. are less likely than ever to end with an arrest. https://bit.ly/2SkJD0Z
for a creative approach to frame newly released body-camera footage showing Milwaukee police shooting an unarmed black man, contrasting the way that encounter ended in violence against the peaceful resolution that officers achieved with a white man who confronted officers in the same neighborhood while holding an assault rifle. https://bit.ly/2TIR8iE
When Ronald Greene died in 2019, Louisiana State Police troopers initially blamed the Black manâs death on injuries from a crash at the end of a high-speed chase, then later said Greene became unresponsive in a struggle with troopers and died on his way to the hospital.
For the most part, that was all the public would know about the case, until APâs Jim Mustian took up the story. Since he began reporting nine months ago, heâs broken a string of stories revealing there was more to the story. But Mustian always knew he needed to get his hands on one crucial piece of evidence: video.
This past week, Mustian did just that. In the most explosive break yet in the case, Mustian obtained body camera footage that showed Greene repeatedly apologizing and pleading for mercy as troopers jolted him with stun guns, put him in a choke hold, punched him and dragged him by his ankle shackles. The story led national newscasts and websites, and fronted newspapers across the country, with credit to APâs reporting and the video, again and again.
This scoop was the work of one dogged investigative reporter who never stopped believing that the world should know what really happened to Ronald Greene. For that we honor Jim Mustian with APâs Best of the Week award.
In a classic case of keeping an open mind during reporting, APâs Jim Mustian and Kim Chandler started out reporting one story, but found themselves reporting exclusively that an Alabama state trooper, arrested on charges he raped an 11-year-old girl, had used a forged letter and lied on his application to get hired after being removed from the FBI — also on serious allegations of sexual misconduct.
To federal law enforcement reporter Mustian, this initially appeared as yet another case of the FBI allowing an accused agent to quietly move on with his career. But just as he was about to publish, the FBI said the bureau letter Christopher Bauer submitted to Alabama authorities when he was hired was ânot legitimate.â Meanwhile, Chandler, Montgomery statehouse reporter, tracked down Bauerâs application for the trooper job, in which he said he was still employed by the FBI and had never been forced to resign because of disciplinary action.
This had become the story of a former agent, and perhaps others, falsifying his record. The piece was among the weekâs top stories on AP News, with nearly 200,000 pageviews.
For deep reporting that followed the story wherever it took them, Mustian and Chandler earn this weekâs Best of the States award.
From major breaking news in the U.S. to unmatched international enterprise reporting, two very different entries — worlds apart but united by excellence — produce a rare joint winner for APâs Best of the Week.
First, APâs teamwork delivered unmatched breaking and explanatory cross-format coverage around the verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial, a case that framed the conversation on race and policing. Then, the trio of Cara Anna, Nariman El-Mofty and Mohaned Awad produced a riveting package on a Tigray fatherâs harrowing journey with his newborn twins, a stark illustration of the devastating war in Ethiopiaâs Tigray region.
For powerful journalism that defines the range and depth of APâs global coverage, the all-formats teams behind this compelling work share APâs Best of the Week honors.
for their investigation breaking the news of dozens of unredacted legal claims seeking more than $200 million in damages for trauma and abuse alleged by parents and their children who had been separated at the border; these included children who were sexually molested by other children in foster homes.The administrative claims shared with The Associated Press were heartbreaking: Young children pulled from their parentsâ arms by government agents were sent to foster homes and residential shelters where they suffered sexual and other physical and emotional abuse. The reporters revealed the high cost of the claims: more than $200 million for 38 claims is just âthe tip of the icebergâ said lawyers. And this was the first report that some separated children in foster homes â considered safer and healthier â had been sexually molested. The story ran with exclusive photographs and video of a father whose young son, whose heart was failing, was put in a foster home where he was molested by other children.https://bit.ly/2YQwnbLhttps://bit.ly/2L0R1Mv
pivoted off the nationwide protests against racial injustice to reveal that families around the country are pushing authorities to reinvestigate police killings of Black men in which no officers were charged.Lavoie had developed a relationship over two years with the family of a man who was killed in 2018 by Richmond, Virginia, police during a mental health crisis. When nightly protests began in Richmond after George Floydâs killing, she noticed that protesters made reopening the local investigation one of their top demands for reform. Additional reporting found at least a dozen calls to reinvestigate such cases around the country. Lavoie focused on three of those in different states, with victims of different backgrounds who were killed under different circumstances. Over the course of two months she convinced the families to talk about their loved ones and their efforts to persuade prosecutors to reopen closed investigations. https://bit.ly/36ZC36d
Reporters Christopher Sherman, Martha Mendoza and Garance Burke were weeks into a deep look at police misconduct in Honduras, where public mistrust of law enforcement is among the highest in the world. So when they heard a new national police chief had been appointed, they immediately shifted gears and began asking questions about him.
What they found was explosive â a confidential government security document that detailed a troubling allegation regarding the force. It said the newly named National Police Chief Jose David Aguilar Moran had once helped a drug cartel leader pull off the delivery of nearly a ton of cocaine. The clandestine haul, worth at least $20 million on U.S. streets, was packed inside a tanker truck that, the report said, was escorted by corrupt police officers to the home of Wilter Blanco, a drug trafficker recently convicted in Florida and now serving a 20-year sentence.
For their dogged reporting, Sherman, Mendoza and Burke share the Beat of the Week.
for their exclusive reporting showing that in Pope Francisâ home country Argentina, the number of clerics publicly identified as alleged sexual abusers has increased dramatically in the last two years. https://apnews.com/c62e2d5e692d4d33887a928a7d69839...
Iowa City correspondent Ryan J. Foley has written extensively about problems tracking felons who are ineligible to vote in Iowa, but it had been five years since heâd gotten a copy of the database itself. So when a trusted source produced a state database of 103,000 felons, Foley set to work analyzing the data. He found it riddled with errors, including laughable mistakes â such as the Des Moines Police Department being banned from voting.
The story was used extensively by Iowa newspapers and broadcasters, who were especially interested given that Iowaâs governor is seeking to change the law regarding voting by felons who have completed their sentences.
For detailed research and reporting that produced an engaging story of statewide interest, Foley earns APâs Best of the States award.
for obtaining exclusive correspondence from disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick to three seminarians he is accused of sexually molesting or abusing. Winfield was tipped off to the story by seeing the correspondence to one seminarian in APâs project files for The Reckoning investigation. That led to examples of McCarrickâs correspondence with two more men. Appearing innocuous and warm, McCarrickâs letters and postcards to the young men are a window into the way a predator grooms his prey, according to abuse prevention experts consulted by the AP. https://bit.ly/2Mjlk45