Naval Criminal Investigative Service | investigative journalism | Investigative journalism | Investigative Project on Terrorism | Traffic reporting | Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting | Options Price Reporting Authority | International Financial Reporting Standards | Center for Investigative Reporting | Automatic Packet Reporting System | SQL Server Reporting Services | Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting | Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting | Exposé: America's Investigative Reports | Defense Criminal Investigative Service | Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America | Business reporting | Ukrayinska Pravda's chief investigative journalists, Serhiy Leshchenko (center) and Mustafa Nayem | traffic reporting | '''''The London Gazette''''': later reprint of the front page from 3–10 September 1666, reporting on the Great Fire of London | Reporting Scotland | Reporter from 1+1 reporting live outside the parliament in Tbilisi | Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting | Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting | Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting | National Incident Based Reporting System | Journal of Investigative Dermatology | Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | Independent Police Investigative Directorate | Incorporated Council of Law Reporting |
The newspaper features editorial columns by noted science fiction and fantasy author and Mormon Orson Scott Card and local investigative reporting by New York Times best-selling author Jerry Bledsoe.
Stark began her television career as a documentary producer for the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) program "Inside Story," for which she won a 1983 Emmy Award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting for her work on the CBS News versus William Westmoreland lawsuit.
In 1976, she moved to WSM-TV in Nashville, where she was instrumental in the investigative reporting that ultimately led to the ouster and indictment of then-Tennessee Governor Ray Blanton.
He worked for The St. Petersburg Times in Florida, where he was a finalist for three Reporting Pulitzers: spot news reporting in 1997, investigative reporting in 1998; and explanatory journalism in 1998 (now called explanatory reporting).
The Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting is an award for journalists administered by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University.
She earned a Los Angeles Emmy Award for her investigative reporting in 1992, as well.
In 2004, Mahr was awarded the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting along with Mitch Weiss and Michael D. Sallah, for a series on the atrocites committed by Tiger Force, a U.S. Army platoon during the Vietnam War.
In 1992 his investigative reporting for the News & Record into fraud in the tobacco industry earned a Pulitzer Prize nomination, a Science in Society Journalism Award from the National Association of Science Writers, and Medical Writer of the Year in North Carolina.
Magen Tzedek certification was initiated by Conservative rabbi Morris Allen of Beth Jacob Congregation in Mendota Heights, Minnesota in 2007 following investigative reporting by Nathaniel Popper in The Jewish Daily Forward regarding working conditions at Agriprocessors kosher meat plant in Postville, Iowa.
Second place in the Chicago International Film Festival investigative reporting category (1996) for Erlich's TV documentary "Prison Labor/Prison Blues."
Since 2002 Speer has been visual arts critic at Willamette Week, a Portland, Oregon alternative weekly newspaper that won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting in 2005.
Lowell Bergman, Reva and David Logan Distinguished Professor in Investigative Reporting and former 60 Minutes producer