ProPublica Wins National Magazine Award
Last night, Sheri Fink's "The Deadly Choices at Memorial," published in The New York Times Magazine and on our site, was awarded the National Magazine Award for Reporting. Fink's story was also honored earlier this month with a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting.
The National Magazine Awards honor "the enterprise, skill and analysis that a magazine exhibits in covering an event or problem of contemporary interest and significance." In the story, Fink explored what really happened to some of the patients who died at New Orleans's Memorial Medical Center in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The 13,000-word story was published last August.
Click here to see a list of all of the National Magazine Award winners. Congratulations to everyone involved!
Get Updates
Our Hottest Stories
- Donations to Scott Walker Flagged as Potential Fraud
- In Race For Better Cell Service, Men Who Climb Towers Pay With Their Lives
- Billion Dollar Bait & Switch: States Divert Foreclosure Deal Funds
- Pardon Attorney Torpedoes Plea for Presidential Mercy
- Patient Died at New York VA Hospital After Alarm Was Ignored
- Introducing the ProPublica Patient Harm Community on Facebook
- Got Student Loans? Share Your Documents With Us
- Built for a Simpler Era, OSHA Struggles When Tower Climbers Die
- Remember Stuxnet? Why the U.S. is Still Vulnerable
- Finding Oscar: Massacre, Memory and Justice in Guatemala
- Donations to Scott Walker Flagged as Potential Fraud
- Pardon Attorney Torpedoes Plea for Presidential Mercy
- In Race For Better Cell Service, Men Who Climb Towers Pay With Their Lives
- Air Force Pilots Balk at Flying the World’s Most Expensive Fighter Jet
- Watchdog Group Calls for Probe of Lobbyists Behind Congressional Trip to Taiwan
- Patient Died at New York VA Hospital After Alarm Was Ignored
- Billion Dollar Bait & Switch: States Divert Foreclosure Deal Funds
- Broadcasters Sue to...Block Transparency
- Happy Graduation! Here's The Best, Most Depressing Journalism on Student Debt
- Remember Stuxnet? Why the U.S. is Still Vulnerable






