Posts tagged CNN
"Destroyed: How the trashing of rape kits failed victims and jeopardizes public safety"

My investigation “Destroyed” uncovered that police nationwide trashed rape kits – most never tested for DNA – in at least 400 sex crime cases before the statutes of limitations expired or when there was no time limit to prosecute. The destruction followed flawed and incomplete investigations and, in some cases, violated the law.

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“The untold financial cost of rape”

While the physical and emotional toll of rape is enormous, so, too, are the financial costs. I spoke with survivors who, because of their attacks, lost days from work, or found themselves unable to work again. Some described how their rape led them to drop out of college, setting them back years in pursuing their education and delaying their entry into the workforce. Others had to relocate after being assaulted in their homes.

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“Jessica Lynch’s nightmares”

The former Army soldier told me that in the 12 years since she was taken hostage in Iraq, she had never sought therapy to reckon with that trauma. She’s paid for that in many ways, including suffering constant nightmares. The men come for her every night. They chase her through the woods. The crunching of the earth beneath her boots drowns out her pounding breath. She turns but can’t see their faces. Before they grab her, she wakes up.

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"The Uncounted"

This multi-year investigation revealed that military family members were attempting and committing suicide during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, but the Defense Department was not keeping track of their deaths. The story offers intimate portraits of a teen, a spouse, siblings and a mother and father whose vicarious trauma brought them to the brink.

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“A servant to the poor or ‘a wolf in sheep’s clothing’?”

Pulitzer-winning reporter Sally Kestin and I collaborated on this quintessential shoe-leather story that required us to dig some 35 years in the past to uncover a powerful charity leader’s hidden sex crime conviction. We methodically tracked down Bill Murdock’s victim – combing through yearbooks, talking to classmates, tracking down retired teachers – and helped her tell her story for the first time. We also dug into the charity leader’s claims of awards which we discovered were bogus or exaggerated. From tip to publication, this story took six weeks.

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“On WikiLeaks scandal, hacker says he didn’t want to be a ‘coward’”

I got an exclusive first interview with Adrian Lamo, the hacker to whom Bradley Manning confessed. U.S. Army Private Manning stole government documents that revealed secret information about U.S. war strategy and reached out to Lamo, a rockstar in the hacker world, to ask Lamo what he should do with the information. Lamo went to the FBI. "I went to the right authorities, because it seemed incomprehensible that someone could leak that massive amount of data and not have it endanger human life," Lamo said. "If I had acted for my own comfort and convenience and sat on my hands with that information, and I had endangered national security ... I would have been the worst kind of coward."

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