
Denver Post staff photographer Craig F. Walker reacts to winning his second Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography on Monday in Denver. His story on veteran Scott Ostrom’s battle with PTSD has been widely regarded since its publication on the Denver Post’s MediaCenter in December 2011. (The Associated Press)
The AP won a Pulitzer for investigative journalism, while the national reporting prize went to the Huffington Post’s David Wood. Other journalism winners in the awards announced Monday included another Pulitzer for investigative reporting awarded to The Seattle Times for a series about accidental methadone overdoses among patients with chronic pain.
In the arts categories, the late Manning Marable won the Pulitzer Prize for history, honored for a Malcolm X book he worked on for decades but did not live to see published. Quiara Alegria Hudes’ play “ Water by the Spoonful,” which centers on an Iraq war veteran’s search for meaning, won the Pulitzer for drama.
The New York Times won two prizes. David Kocieniewski was honored in the explanatory reporting category for a series on how wealthy people and corporations use loopholes to avoid taxes. Jeffrey Gettleman received the award for international reporting for his coverage of famine and conflict in East Africa.
The AP’s series of stories — available online at http:// apne. ws/ IrNyPk — showed how New York police, with the help of a CIA official, created an aggressive surveillance program to gather intelligence on Muslim neighborhoods, businesses and houses of worship. It was the 50th Pulitzer won by the news organization.
The articles showed that police systematically listened in on sermons, hung out at cafes and other public places, infiltrated colleges and photographed people as part of a broad effort to prevent terrorist attacks. Individuals and groups were monitored even when there was no evidence they were linked to terrorism.
The series, which began in August, was by Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Eileen Sullivan and Chris Hawley. The stories prompted protests, a demand from 34 members of Congress for a federal investigation, and an internal inquiry by the CIA’s inspector general. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Mayor Michael Bloomberg have defended the program as a thoroughly legal tool for keeping the city safe.
A year after the Pulitzer judges found no entry worthy of the prize for breaking news, The Tuscaloosa News of Alabama won the award for coverage of a deadly tornado. By blending traditional reporting with the use of social media, the newspaper provided real-time updates and helped locate missing people, while producing indepth print coverage despite a power outage that forced the paper to publish at a plant 50 miles away.
The twister hit just after the news staff had had a session on how to use social media to cover the news, city editor Katherine Lee recalled.
“I think we won because the tornado hit where we live, and we all felt a responsibility to do this well, to tell our story well — about how people came together to help total strangers,” Lee said.
The judges declined to award a prize for editorial writing.
The Patriot-News and Sara Ganim, its police and courts reporter, won the local reporting Pulitzer for “courageously revealing and adeptly covering the explosive Penn State sex scandal,” the Pulitzer judges wrote.
The Philadelphia Inquirer — which has recently gone through bankruptcy and repeated rounds of cutbacks and has changed hands five times in the past six years — showed how school violence went underreported and earned the public service Pulitzer. In response, the school system established a new way of keeping track of serious incidents.
Michael J. Berens and Ken Armstrong of The Seattle Times looked at the consequences when patients with state-subsidized health care were moved from safer paincontrol drugs to methadone, which is cheaper but carries more risks. “Not only is this wrong, but this is incredibly tragic,” Berens said.
At The Huffington Post, Wood, a veteran military correspondent, looked at catastrophically wounded soldiers’ physical and emotional struggles, as well as how their families, communities, comrades and doctors responded. It was only the second Pulitzer ever awarded for reporting that appeared online only.
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