WASHINGTON, D.C. March 20, 2003 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) national book award for 2002, for Capitol Offenders: How Private Interests Govern Our States, published by Public Integrity Books. Book authors are Diane Renzulli, John Dunbar, Alex Knott, Robert Moore and Leah Rush.
The Center was a finalist in the Online category for Enron’s Big Political Donors, written by John Dunbar, Robert Moore and MaryJo Sylwester.
The IRE judges noted about Capitol Offenders, “The scope of this investigation is breathtaking. The Center for Public Integrity gathered information from all 7,400 state legislators in America to focus on a crucial, overlooked issue. Many legislators seek committee assignments allowing them to enhance their private financial interests, often at the expense of their constituents. The book demonstrates that vested interests are influencing legislators’ decisions on education, health care, insurance, public safety and the environment.”
Charles Lewis, executive director of the Center, said, “We are so pleased to be recognized in this way. We have been looking at conflicts of interest in state legislatures nationwide now for the past eight years, and Capitol Offenders was the culmination of all of that work. I think this is the first book ever written about legal corruption in the state legislatures nationwide. My hat is off to the wonderful states team, led by Diane Renzulli and now Leah Rush, and writers John Dunbar, Alex Knott and Robert Moore. Managing editor Bill Allison oversaw and edited the book.”
Lewis noted that Enron’s Big Political Donors had almost immediate results. Within hours of the publication of the report on the Center’s online newsletter, the Public i, Attorney General John Ashcroft had to recuse himself from the Enron criminal investigation, following heavy coverage by the national news media.
This is the second national IRE book award the Center has won in the past four years. Center for Public Integrity reports have been honored 13 times since 1996 by the Society for Professional Journalists (SPJ) or Investigative Reporters and Editors.
The Center for Public Integrity conducts investigative research to uncover corruption and abuse of power by governments, corporations and individuals involved in the political process. The findings of our investigations focus on issues that pose potential conflicts of interest among power brokers and governments.
The Center’s findings are published as reports and studies on the web, and in book form and distributed to the widest possible audience.
The Center, which is a non-profit, nonpartisan, tax-exempt organization, was founded in 1989 by Charles Lewis, a former producer with the CBS television program, 60 Minutes.
The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, nonpartisan independent Washington, D.C.-based organization that does investigative reporting and research on significant public issues. Since 1990, the Center has released more than 400 investigative reports and 17 books. It has received the prestigious George Polk Award and more than 22 other national journalism awards and 16 finalist nominations from national organizations, including PEN USA and Investigative Reporters and Editors. In April 2006, the Society of Professional Journalists recognized the Center with a national award for excellence in online public service journalism for the fifth consecutive year. In October 2006, the Center was honored with the Online News Association’s coveted General Excellence Award. In March 2007, the Center was given a special citation for the body of its investigative work from the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

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