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Investigative Reporting
Each year New Times writers and editors produce some of the nation's finest investigative journalism, taking top honors in national awards contests with their in-depth projects and special reports. Here are a few of our best recent efforts:
 
 
Village Voice
August 9, 2007
"Rudy Giuliani's Five Big Lies About 9/11"
Someone needed to give the tough-talking presidential candidate a reality check about what happened on that fateful day. We were happy to oblige.
By Wayne Barrett



Seattle Weekly
July 18, 2007
"What If They Weren't Gay?"
Newly declassified documents put the lie to the government's claim of a Cold War homosexual conspiracy.
By Rick Anderson



Phoenix New Times
June 14, 2007
"Snake on a Plane"
You won't believe what happened when the cops told the airline it had a murderer on board.
By Paul Rubin



Miami New Times
May 17, 2007
"Rapture of the Deep"
The horrible story of how a ghostly shipwreck claimed new victims off Key Largo.
By Tamara Lush



Dallas Observer
March 8, 2007
"House of Death"
A dozen men were tortured, killed and buried in a small house in Juarez. Three years later, the U.S. government was still trying to cover it up.
By Jesse Hyde



Broward-Palm Beach New Times
March 8, 2007
"Witness for the Intimidation"
When the city bit a dog owner, our reporter saw it happen. When the man bit back in court, our reporter took the stand.
By Bob Norman



Phoenix New Times
December 14, 2006
"Jump Street"
The City of Phoenix's chief financial officer jumped to his death from atop his moving Mercedes. But it was only the beginning of the mystery.
By Paul Rubin



OC Weekly
October 26, 2006
"The New Crips"
An ex-drug dealer and burglar who's spent the better part of his adult life unemployed came up with a brilliant new scam: terrorizing small business owners with a wheelchair posse. And, as R. Scott Moxley revealed, he had the law on his side.
By R. Scott Moxley



Westword
October 12, 2006
"Made For Each Other"
Just when the sad saga of JonBenet Ramsey had faded from memory, Colorado authorities thrust the case back into the limelight by arresting a publicity seeker named John Mark Karr for her murder. It was left to Alan Prendergast to write the definitive story of how a university professor with an agenda--and a history of fingering the wrong suspects — led the Boulder DA to make such a colossal blunder.
By Alan Prendergast



Broward-Palm Beach New Times
October 12, 2006
"Charlie Crist is NOT Gay"
And other things the Republican Party wanted Florida voters to believe on election day.
By Julia Reischel



Broward-Palm Beach New Times
September 28, 2006
"Daddy's Girl"
When multimillionaire investor Bruce McMahan discovered he had an adult daughter from a previous relationship, he welcomed her into his family. And then tried to marry her. The story made headlines around the world — and our Kelly Cramer was the reporter who broke it.
By Kelly Cramer



Broward-Palm Beach New Times
August 10, 2006
"Witness for the Intimidation"
When the city bit a dog owner, our reporter saw it happen. When the man bit back in court, our reporter took the stand.
By Bob Norman



Miami New Times
June 8, 2006
"Pearl of the Antilles"
Our woman in Guantanamo told the real story about a surreal place.
By Emily Witt



Houston Press
March 30, 2006
"Run Over by Metro"
When Press, staff writer Todd Spivak investigated the city's bus company, he discovered that the agency had a habit of maiming and injuring the very people it was supposed to be serving. Spivak's reporting, which involved extensive interviews and the review of thousands of public documents, revealed that the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County hounded victims to settle accidents, fudged statistics, and rejected the safety recommendations of its own experts. For his efforts, he won the 2006 Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) Award.
By Todd Spivak



Phoenix New Times
March 16, 2006
"Cracked Houses"
People are pouring into Arizona, and homebuilders are only too happy to cash in on the boom. But as New Times staff writer Sarah Fenske reported after scouring through mountains of court cases and formal complaints, many of those new residents are realizing that their dream homes were built on shifting soil. As a result, cracked foundations are as common as cacti--and developers are being plenty prickly about fixing the multi-million-dollar mess they've created. Fenske's story was named a national finalist in the 2006 Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) Awards.
By Sarah Fenske



LA Weekly
January 23, 2006
"Navahoax"
When Nasdijj first appeared in the pages of Esquire magazine in 1999, he was heralded as a shining star in the dwindling constellation of Native American writers. The Navajo wordsmith went on to publish three critically acclaimed memoirs, drawing raves from the New York Times Book Review and others for his poignant descriptions of father-son dynamics in Indian Country. But as Fleischer revealed, real Navajos had long been suspicious of Nasdijj. And they proved to be the savvier critics. Rather than the Great Red Hope, Fleischer revealed, Nasdijj was instead a middle-aged white man who had pulled off one of the greatest hoaxes in publishing history. The story was named a national finalist in the 2006 Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) contest.
By Matthew Fleischer



The Pitch
October 14, 2005
"Walking on Water"
When a man's wife and kids were swept away during a flash flood on a Kansas highway, the mainstream media hailed him as a heroic figure. Pitch staff writer Kendrick Blackwood dug deeper and found a murkier, more disturbing truth.
By Kendrick Blackwood



More Investigative Reporting > >


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