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The Center for Public Integrity

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  1. Did the FDA Miss Signals on a Troubled Heart Drug?

    Did the FDA Miss Signals on a Troubled Heart Drug? It has been a rough eight months for the drug maker Actavis, Inc. and its powerful heart drug, Digitek. Following repeated Food and Drug Administration… Read more

  2. Big Tobacco’s New York Black Market

    Big Tobacco’s New York Black Market For New York Governor David Paterson, there was no good option.

    Faced with a crushing state deficit, angry American Indians, and uncooperative tobacco… Read more

  1. Pets and Pesticides: Let’s Be Careful Out There

    Pets and Pesticides: Let’s Be Careful Out There Last June Diane Bromenschenkel applied a flea-and-tick product to her English pointer, Wings, so the dog wouldn’t get ticks while hunting pheasant in the tall… Read more

  2. Outsiders Target Indian Land for Risky Business

    Outsiders Target Indian Land for Risky Business Deep in the foothills, miles above California’s Sacramento Valley, the 640-acre home of the Cortina Band of Wintun Indians lies empty except for six houses,… Read more

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Front & Center
  1. Big Tobacco’s New York Black Market

    Big Tobacco’s New York Black Market WASHINGTON, D.C., December 19, 2008 — America’s three top tobacco firms — Philip Morris USA, Lorillard, and R.J. Reynolds — supplied two-thirds of all cigarettes… Read more

  2. Pearl Project Lawsuit Filed Against Eight Federal Agencies

    Pearl Project Lawsuit Filed Against Eight Federal Agencies WASHINGTON, D.C., December 17, 2008 — Barbara Feinman Todd, an associate dean of journalism at Georgetown University and co-director of the Pearl Project, Read more

  1. Intern at the Center

    Intern at the Center The Center for Public Integrity is accepting applications for our internship program. Summer internships are full-time, paid positions; the Center also is offering a part-time… Read more

  2. Podcasts

    Podcasts The Center's podcast series, narrated by Bill Buzenberg, features our reporters and sources discussing investigations. Read more

More Front & Center News >

Archive InvestigationsArchive Investigations
  1. The Buying of the President 2008

    Will 2008, which is shaping up to be the most expensive campaign year ever, be an election or an auction? The Center’s quadrennial signature project is online now, always with fresh material.

  2. Pushing Prescriptions

    The Center’s investigation of the pharmaceutical industry’s lobbying might and gifts of free travel for members of Congress — and its resulting political influence and impact on the American public.

  3. Welding’s Toxic Legacy

    The shaking in Jeffrey Tamraz’s right hand began in 2001. It was intermittent, so he paid it little mind. A six-foot, 260-pound bear of a man, he’d played football and thrown shot and discus in high school; later he got into competitive weightlifting, and worked up to bench-pressing 465 pounds — once, to win a bet, he flipped a Honda Civic on its side. He brought the same passion to his work. “I taught welding for six years,” he says. “I read books on welding. I loved to weld.”

  4. Over the Limit

    Rusk County, Texas — A gentle twilight pink stretches across the sky, touching the waters of Martin Creek Lake. The still air, smelling only of East Texas pines, brings the faint sounds of wildlife in the surrounding woods. Smog and traffic seem much further away than the 145-mile drive to Dallas.

  5. Great Lakes Danger Zones?

    Here’s the report that top officials of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention thought was too hot for the public to handle — and the story behind it.

  6. Windfalls of War II

    The Center reveals that military contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan grew from $11 billion in 2004 to more than $25 billion in 2006 — and that billions have gone to unidentified foreign companies.

  7. States of Disclosure

    Washington State is tops in making it easy to track the private interests of public officials, and Vermont, Michigan, and Idaho tie for last in the Center’s national ranking. Check where your state ranks.

  1. Collateral Damage

    Post-9/11 U.S. foreign policy and military aid and assistance had a huge impact in nations around the world — and at home. This award-winning project includes 20 articles from four continents.

  2. Wasting Away

    The Superfund isn’t so super anymore. A year-long investigation examined all 1,624 Superfund sites and found daunting toxic threats across the country 27 years after the Environmental Protection Agency program was launched.

  3. The Shadow Government

    At least 900 little-known federal advisory committees wield enormous influence over government policy, some to good ends — but many have become secretive, ideological, or packed with industry representatives.

  4. Divine Intervention

    A year-long investigation of President Bush’s initiative to fight AIDS abroad finds that conservative ideology hinders its real benefits by insisting on abstinence-only programs over promoting condom use.

  5. Well Connected

    This project offers a comprehensive examination of business and legislative influences on media — and includes the Media Tracker, a searchable online database of who owns the media serving any U.S. community.

  6. Power Trips

    200 trips to Paris? 150 to Hawaii? 140 to Italy? The Center’s investigation of how private interests gain access to members of Congress by funding supposedly educational or investigative travel.

  7. Katrina Watch

    Government contracts awarded for cleanup and reconstruction after Hurricane Katrina are collected in a searchable database, and the best coverage of what happened on the Gulf Coast is gathered and categorized.

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
  1. January 07, 2009, 3:36 pm

    COAL ASH: The Hidden History

    By Kristen Lombardi

    COAL ASH: The Hidden History The massive coal ash spill in eastern Tennessee in late December is rekindling an old but contentious debate over just how to regulate coal ash — the often toxic solid waste left by burning the black rock to produce electricity. The recent spill is shining a new spotlight on coal ash, but the regulatory history is little known. The debate came to a head in a fierce inter-agency struggle in the waning days of the Clinton administration, only to fade during the Bush years. Read more


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  2. January 06, 2009, 3:15 pm

    POLITICS: Drawing Parallels Between Richardson and Blagojevich

    By Peter Newbatt Smith

    POLITICS: Drawing Parallels Between Richardson and Blagojevich The plight of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson is drawing comparisons to embattled Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich. Richardson, as you may have heard this week, withdrew as nominee for Commerce secretary because of “pay to play” allegations. And Blagojevich, as you no doubt gathered, allegedly tried to sell Obama’s U.S. Senate seat. But there’s another similarity between the two: Neither of their states puts any restrictions on the campaign contributions that would have been the quid in the suspected quid pro quos. Read more


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  3. December 31, 2008, 8:00 am

    Our Top Ten Websites from 2008

    By Andrew Green

    Our Top Ten Websites from 2008 We’re not much for gift giving in the midst of an economic downturn, but PaperTrail couldn’t let 2008 end without offering our readers a homemade run-down of some of our favorite investigative journalism. And instead of some standard, pro forma list, we’re throwing a grab bag of all of our favorites at you, from projects to blogs to websites that help keep our country transparent: Read more


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  4. December 29, 2008, 8:00 am

    INAUGURATION: Who Will Pay for Obama’s Big Day?

    By Caitlin Ginley

    INAUGURATION: Who Will Pay for Obama’s Big Day? President-Elect Obama is carrying his theme of change through the inauguration, where, as reported, he is limiting the amount individuals can donate to his inaugural committee to $50,000 and refusing money from corporations and lobbyists. All well and good — and certainly in line with the campaign finance standards Obama enforced during the election — but with escalating hype surrounding one of the most historic inauguration days in American history, can Obama actually afford to keep such a promise without angering his new neighbors in the District? Read more


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  5. December 23, 2008, 7:00 am

    INAUGURATION: Hillary’s HillRaisers Raising Cash for Obama Inauguration

    By Josh Israel

    INAUGURATION: Hillary’s HillRaisers Raising Cash for Obama Inauguration Throughout the 2008 general election campaign, one of the most frequently reported (some might say over-reported) stories was the rift between supporters of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Now that the two politicians have joined forces — he as president-elect and she as secretary of State-designate, have her supporters followed suit? Read more


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  6. December 19, 2008, 2:37 pm

    INAUGURATION: Barack Obama’s 21 Biggest Fans

    By Josh Israel

    INAUGURATION: Barack Obama’s 21 Biggest Fans Speculating on the next ambassadors to countries blessed by warm and cozy climates? You could do worse than starting with this list: Twenty-one individuals who have donated to Obama’s campaign and the inaugural committee, and have also bundled campaign contributions for the president-elect. Read more


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  7. December 18, 2008, 4:43 pm

    FINANCE: A Good Time To Be a White-Collar Criminal?

    By Nick Schwellenbach

    FINANCE: A Good Time To Be a White-Collar Criminal? The Securities and Exchange Commission has said that it failed to pursue a variety of allegations about Bernard Madoff’s alleged Ponzi scheme, which may have cost investors as much as $50 billion. But that admission may be part of a larger problem, according to recent statistics: the government’s apparent laxity in investigating various white-collar crimes. Case in point: mortgage fraud. Read more


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  8. December 17, 2008, 1:11 pm

    ENVIRONMENT: High-Stakes Lobbying Over Ethanol’s Indirect Impact

    By Marianne Lavelle

    ENVIRONMENT: High-Stakes Lobbying Over Ethanol’s Indirect Impact When a farmer sows a field of corn in Iowa to meet the nation’s growing demand for the alternative fuel ethanol, is a corner of the Brazilian rain forest destroyed? Read more


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