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The Center for Public Integrity

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  1. Global Warming: Heated Denials

    Global Warming: Heated Denials Stand-up comedian Tim Slagle was on a roll. In a lunchtime routine tailored to 400 conference attendees, Slagle was killing ‘em with jokes about, well,… Read more

  2. Two-Party Debates

    Two-Party Debates On the night of September 30, 2004, few of the estimated 62.4 million viewers watching President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry square off… Read more

  1. World Wide Web of Pesticides Can Endanger Consumers

    World Wide Web of Pesticides Can Endanger Consumers Termites? No problem. On DoMyOwnPestControl.com, $64.99 buys a 20-ounce bottle of Termidor SC. That’s enough for anyone with a credit card and a shipping address… Read more

  2. Mixing Oil and Politics Is Formula for Newt’s “Solutions”

    Mixing Oil and Politics Is Formula for Newt’s “Solutions” Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich isn’t running for president this year, but due to a gusher of support for his campaign to promote opening up… Read more

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Front & Center
  1. Center for Public Integrity Hires Five New Editors, Senior Journalists

    Center for Public Integrity Hires Five New Editors, Senior Journalists WASHINGTON, D.C., September 30, 2008 — The Center for Public Integrity has added two new editors and three new senior journalists to its editorial team,… Read more

  2. Center Announces Winners of First Daniel Pearl Award

    Center Announces Winners of First Daniel Pearl Award LILLEHAMMER, NORWAY, Sept. 13, 2008 — A New York Times series about deadly Chinese counterfeit drugs sold around the world and a TV4 Sweden investigation… Read more

  1. The Center in the News

    The Center in the News The latest media coverage of Center projects. 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. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

  6. 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.

  7. 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.

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. LobbyWatch

    An investigation into the state of federal lobbying identifies the top 100 lobbying companies and organizations — led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — as well as the top 250 lobbying firms.

  6. Outsourcing the Pentagon

    Who’s winning the big contracts? Between 1998 and 2004 no-bid contracts accounted for more than 40 percent of Pentagon contracting, totaling $368 billion — and many contractors were generous campaign donors.

  7. The Politics of Oil

    The vast influence over government policy wielded by the oil and gas industry and its related interest groups, employees, and political action committees is helped along by the millions in campaign contributions this project analyzes.

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
  1. October 09, 2008, 2:04 pm

    ENERGY: Brooks Brothers Rioter Turns Attention to Energy this Election Season

    By Marianne Lavelle

    ENERGY: Brooks Brothers Rioter Turns Attention to Energy this Election Season An advocacy group run by a political operative with oil industry ties (and a famous photo-op history) is spearheading a late advertising blitz to sway Senate races, spending more than $650,000 in the last month to blast the Democratic candidates in Colorado and Kentucky, and to urge support for Republican incumbents in Mississippi. Read more


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  2. October 08, 2008, 8:01 am
    From the Vaults

    Angola-Gate Case Goes on Without ‘Extraordinary Operator’

    By Peter Newbatt Smith

    Angola-Gate Case Goes on Without ‘Extraordinary Operator’ That was then . . .

    One chapter of the Center’s 2002 report Making a Killing: The Business of War was devoted to Arcadi Gaydamak, whom we described as “one of the most extraordinary operators in world business.” In 1993 and 1994 he and his French business partner, Pierre Falcone, arranged for $633 million in arms to be shipped from Russia and other Eastern European countries to the government of Angola, then engaged in a civil war. The United Nations had imposed an arms embargo on Angola, and France maintained that Falcone’s company did not have government authorization for the sales. Read more


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  3. October 07, 2008, 2:54 pm

    POLITICS: After the Whistle Blows

    By Sarah Laskow

    POLITICS: After the Whistle Blows Christopher De Rosa, a top scientist at the Centers for Disease Control, is still serving as a scapegoat for leaders at the organization, judging from a new congressional report released Monday about the CDC’s failure to act on dangerous formaldehyde levels reported in trailers for refugees from hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Read more


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  4. October 03, 2008, 4:16 pm

    ELECTION ’08: F is for Friday and Financial Disclosure

    By Sarah Laskow

    ELECTION ’08: F is for Friday and Financial Disclosure The McCain campaign posted Sarah Palin’s financial disclosure form and her tax returns from 2006 and 2007 this afternoon. The Palins paid $22,721 in taxes on $166,080 adjusted gross income last year. Read more


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  5. October 03, 2008, 10:50 am

    ELECTION ’08: Disclosure

    By Sarah Laskow

    ELECTION ’08: Disclosure Sarah Palin is turning in her personal financial disclosure forms to the Federal Election Commission on Monday. Will the forms give the pundits yet another excuse to slam on McCain’s veep? Read more


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  6. October 02, 2008, 4:16 pm

    POLITICS: Executive Privilege + Congressional Timidity = Stalled Investigations

    By Marianne Lavelle

    POLITICS: Executive Privilege + Congressional Timidity = Stalled Investigations With Capitol Hill consumed by the nation’s financial crisis, time is running out on the broader search to find out just what happened behind closed doors during the last eight years. As the Bush administration winds down, numerous congressional investigations on a range of issues from greenhouse gas emissions standards to the firings of federal prosecutors remain unresolved — blocked by the White House’s wide-ranging assertions of executive privilege. Read more


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  7. October 02, 2008, 10:53 am

    POLITICS: Americans for Limited Credibility

    By Josh Israel

    POLITICS: Americans for Limited Credibility A major libertarian political activist has sent thousands of letters to liberal funders threatening to expose them in their local communities, Ben Smith of The Politico reported Wednesday. The letters warn, "Should any of these organizations be found to be engaged in illegal or questionable activity, it is our intent to publicize your involvement with those activities." What is not mentioned is that the originators of the letter, Howard Rich and his tax-exempt political group Americans for Limited Government, don't actually release the names of their own donors and have a history of questionable activities. Read more


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  8. October 01, 2008, 4:07 pm

    ECONOMY: Counting on a New Accounting

    By Marianne Lavelle

    ECONOMY: Counting on a New Accounting It has to be one of the more obscure subjects ever addressed in a news release from a major presidential campaign. John McCain — who two weeks ago called for the ouster of Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox — now is praising the agency. Why? Its decision on Tuesday “to relax mark-to-market accounting requirements.” Read more


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