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 an exclusive, multi-format profile about a family that fled Syria and arrived in San Diego ...
http://apne.ws/2cnuzhe
or reporting that the head of the Indiana Department of Education's office circumvented the rules ...
http://bit.ly/2cEXVFF
for exposing how government officials are being accused of diverting food aid from camps for people who fled Boko Haram extremists, leading to a high number of starving children.
http://bit.ly/2ccmvfH
http://apne.ws/2bzjfit
for one of the first published interviews that Warren Beatty has given in years on the occasion of his new Howard Hughes biopic, "The Rules Don't Apply."
http://bayareane.ws/2cFXsWA
The scene, presented in the most vivid close-up, shows a paramedic frantically pushing an IV full of an opioid blocker into the vein of a woman turning blue and barely breathing. Then the radio squawks: Two more overdoses just reported. Where will Claire Galofaro’s riveting narrative go from here?
“The woman’s eyes blinked open” she writes next. Then: “Red lights on the phone at the 911 dispatch center flashed faster and faster until all 16 lines were screaming. They called from the dining room of a rickety house, the parking lot of a fast food restaurant, the bathroom of a gas station. `People are dying everywhere,’ one caller said.”
When WikiLeaks announced the release of hundreds of Saudi diplomatic documents last year, AP’s Raphael Satter in Paris and Maggie Michael in Cairo provided some of the most aggressive coverage of the leak. They broke news about everything from the secretive kingdom’s checkbook diplomacy to unpaid limousine bills and cheating students.
But as they plowed through the documents, they also noticed medical and identity documents -- potentially serious privacy violations. Satter flagged the issue but never got a formal response from WikiLeaks; with other stories on the horizon and only a handful of questionable documents in hand, Satter and Michael shelved the subject.
As nurse practitioners, Sister Margaret Held and Sister Paula Merrill played a pivotal role in the lives of many people in rural Holmes County, Mississippi, which with 44 percent of its residents living in poverty ranks as the seventh-poorest county in America, according to the Census Bureau.
So when the two Roman Catholic nuns were found stabbed to death in the home they shared, the news devastated friends and families, as well as the many people who came to rely on the pair for critical, life-saving medical care.
in all formats, for scoring a two-hour beat over the competition with first photos and video from the scene of Italy’s devastating earthquake, and following it with exclusive aerial images of flattened villages from a rented helicopter. They also found and interviewed the nun who became the icon of the devastation.
for reporting that Hillary Clinton met with numerous Clinton Foundation donors during her early years as secretary of state.
for telling the story of the largest and most diverse generation in US history in a way that went beyond the millennial stereotype often seen elsewhere.
for scoring a number of scoops on the killings of two nuns in a small Mississippi town, including news that the suspect had confessed.
for showing how a pair of Baptist churches in Georgia, one black and one white, have started trying to build a connection by confronting racism.
for discovering an error that was written into a state ballot initiative that aims to reverse severe new restrictions on medical marijuana distribution in Montana.
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 Lochte’s teammates being detained after they were removed from an airplane, and police officials expressing their doubts about Lochte’s 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 their aggressive all-formats coverage of the historic flooding in Louisiana, which drove the news cycle each day. http://apne.ws/2bw9AZ4
for his all-formats coverage of the fire-spitting show put on by lava from the Kilauea volcano as it flowed down to the Pacific Ocean for the first time in three years. http://apne.ws/2beLVvY
for his report revealing that the GOP nominee for governor had exaggerated his humanitarian work before entering politics. http://bit.ly/2bG4gCN
for turning a tidbit from one university into a national story about the sharp increase in the number of people in the U.S. donating their bodies to science. http://abcn.ws/2aZyQCO
for using reporting and data-gathering skills to produce an exclusive story about the increase of violent or disruptive threats to schools across the U.S. http://apne.ws/2bbEItj