CHICAGO (AP) — A nonprofit Chicago journalism production company dedicated to holding public institutions accountable won two Pulitzer Prizes for local and audio reporting on Monday. Based on the city’s South Side, the Invisible Institute and its reporter Trina Reynolds-Tyler, along with Sarah Conway of journalism laboratory City Bureau, won a Pulitzer for a seven-part investigative series on missing Black girls and women in Chicago and how racism and the police response contributed to the problem. The reporters questioned the Chicago Police Department’s categorization of 99.8% of missing person cases from 2000 to 2021 as “not criminal in nature.” Reporters identified 11 cases that were wrongly categorized as “closed non-criminal” in the missing persons data despite being likely homicides. “I am hopeful that journalists are more critical of data and commit to telling full stories of people, not just in the worst moments of their lives, but the moments before and after it,” Reynolds-Tyler said. “I want to uplift the loved ones of the missing people profiled in this story.” |
Sri Lanka expresses hope to join BRICS+Immersive Studio Ghibli exhibition opens in ShanghaiChinese citizen killed, another wounded in mass stabbing attack at Sydney mallHuairou set for Beijing film festival200 days into IsraelA third of foreign students seeking to stay in the UK are at just SIX institutions, figures showIsraeli airstrike kills 14 in Gaza's refugee campChina's sci7 Minnesotans accused in massive scheme to defraud pandemic food program to stand trialSyrian, Russian forces destroy 'terrorist' strongholds in N. Syria