Kristen Lombardi

Staff Writer  The Center for Public Integrity

Kristen Lombardi is an award-winning journalist who has worked for the Center for Public Integrity since 2007. She has been a journalist for more than 17 years. Her investigation into campus rape cases for the Center won the Robert F. Kennedy Award and the Dart Award in 2011, as well as the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service in 2010, among other recognitions. More recently, Lombardi was a staff writer and investigative reporter at the Village Voice, where she provided groundbreaking coverage of the 9/11 health crisis. Her investigative reports as a staff writer for the Boston Phoenix were widely credited with helping to expose the clergy sexual-abuse scandal in that city. Her work for the Center has been honored by the Investigative Reporters and Editors, the National Press Foundation, the Association of Health Care Journalists, the John B. Oakes Environmental Prize, and the Society of Environmental Journalists. She was one of 24 journalists awarded a Nieman Fellowship in Journalism at Harvard University, in 2011-2012. She also won a fellowship from the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma for her coverage of child sexual abuse, and is active in the Dart Society. Lombardi graduated with high honors from the University of California at Berkeley, and has a master’s degree in journalism from Boston University.

Measure takes on issues raised by Center probe

Across the country, residents are challenging the health impact of coal ash ponds -- bringing lawsuits as EPA delays new rules.

Notre Dame case illustrates continuing struggles

Two weeks before the Deepwater Horizon explosion, BP was involved in another major pollution case in Texas.

Sexual Assault on Campus Shrouded in Secrecy

Troubling Discrepancies in Clery Act Numbers

A digital exploration of the environmental and human disaster caused by longwall coal mining.

Longwall mining is draining the water from the springs and streams of northern Appalachia

In northern Appalachia, longwall mines burrow beneath people’s land, water wells and houses.

Citizens concerned about toxic emissions near Buffalo tested the air themselves - forcing complacent regulators to act.

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