December 13th, 2011

Support the Center for Investigative Reporting

Hi Tumblrs! We’re interrupting for a moment to ask for your support. This holiday season, take a moment to support the Center for Investigative Reporting so we can continue to reveal injustice and produce the investigative reporting you depend on! Want to learn about the impact of our work? Read more below from our Executive Director Robert J. Rosenthal.

Since 1977, CIR has been on the forefront of nonprofit investigative reporting, telling thousands of stories on all platforms and through prominent outlets, reaching millions.

Over the years, these stories have sparked federal legislation, policy at all levels of government, United Nations resolutions, public interest lawsuits and changes in corporate practices.

Here are a few examples from the past year:

A Senate committee launches a probe after a CIR investigation found that the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis has done little to improve the nation’s intelligence data.

A police chief resigns amid an FBI investigation and murderers are convicted following dogged reporting by The Chauncey Bailey Project, a collaboration of dozens of news organizations, including CIR, into the murder of Oakland Post editor Bailey by a corrupt group about which he was reporting.

California Gov. Jerry Brown signs two new bills following California Watch stories. One prevents unfair seizures of vehicles from immigrants, and the other removes lead-tainted products – many marketed to children – from store shelves.

A grand jury is convened following reporting by Stanley Nelson of the Concordia Sentinel in Ferriday, La., that identified a leading suspect in the unsolved 1964 murder of Frank Morris. Nelson is part of The Civil Rights Cold Case Project, a collaboration of award-winning journalists, documentary filmmakers, civil rights attorneys, universities and others working together to seek truth; create conditions for justice; and foster reconciliation connected with hundreds of unsolved, racially motivated murders from the Civil Rights era.

Bureaucratic shakeup, rule changes and two separate internal investigations at the California state architect’s office, plus the release of $200 million in bond funds for seismic safety of K-12 schools, follow a California Watch investigation that revealed the failure to fully enforce the state’s landmark earthquake safety law for public schools.

The U.S. State Department requests copies of “The Price of Sex,” the documentary film about international sex trafficking, to use for training at the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons and in embassies around the world.

New laws and penalties are put in place for nursing homes after California Watch revealed that hundreds of homes took money from a taxpayer fund intended to hire staff and boost wages in the name of quality care, but actually cut staff and reduced wages.

The superintendent of public instruction in California calls for an immediate review of school textbooks and a community group gathers 20,000 signatures in opposition to a curriculum after our environmental reporter discovered that the American Chemistry Council directly provided textbook passages that downplayed the environmental risks of plastic grocery bags.

The state Department of Real Estate launches an investigation after we reported about a Southern California housekeeper who was scammed by an unlicensed mortgage lender. At least one reader was so moved by the housekeeper’s story that he donated money directly to her.

Support the Center for Investigative Reporting today!

Photo: CIR’s Executive Director Robert J. Rosenthal

November 3rd, 2011

Ever wonder how investigative journalists work? In our first live Behind the Story event with the San Francisco Film Society, Center for Investigative Reporting journalists G.W. Schulz and Andrew Becker, who reported our Under Suspicion package on suspicious activity reporting, discuss their reporting methodology and how they obtained documents for the investigation.

November 2nd, 2011

Andrew Rossi directed of the documentary “Page One” about the inner workings of the New York Times and the tension between new and old modes of journalism. He speaks with the Center for Investigative Reporting in our Behind the Story series about making the movie and the role investigative journalism plays in society.

October 5th, 2011

Reinventing Journalism: 10 lessons learned (in no particular order)

Executive Director Robert Rosethal lays out 10 lessons he’s learned from his time at The Center for Investigative Reporting.

CIR - Reinventing Journalism - 10 lessons learned (in no particular order)

October 4th, 2011

Sustaining investigative reporting means reinventing journalism itself - read CIR Executive Director Robert Rosenthal’s personal account of creating a new model of investigative reporting and launching California Watch, now the largest investigative reporting team in the state.

californiawatch:

Ever wonder where our investigative stories come from? Or how reporters piece them together? California Watch journalists explain how we do it and why it matters.

Reblogged from California Watch
June 28th, 2011

Andrew Rossi directed the documentary “Page One” about the inner workings of the New York Times and the tension between new and old modes of journalism.  He speaks with the Center for Investigative Reporting about making the movie and the role investigative journalism plays in society.

(Source: centerforinvestigativereporting.org)

June 14th, 2011
Reblogged from Perilous
June 13th, 2011
Journalism is for the young. Young people who go into journalism as a calling are entering, I think, the most worthwhile profession that is possible, and the reason I say that is that there is no profession or industry or calling that tries very hard to tell the truth and to sell the truth and to make the truth make money. The truth is hard, first of all, to get. And harder still to communicate. And more hard to make money on!
Gay Talese (via thedeadline)
Reblogged from Politico
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Founded in 1977, the Center for Investigative Reporting is the nation's oldest nonprofit investigative news organization, producing multimedia reporting that has impact and is relevant to people's lives. Building on our long track record of award-winning print, broadcast and web reporting, CIR is now seeking to help lead the way in transforming journalism for the 21st century.

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