Bill Buzenberg interviews former Congressman Lee H. Hamilton

The Center in the News . . .

A recent Council on Foreign Relations backgrounder titled U.S-Pakistan Military Cooperation cited the Center's Collateral Damage project, which found among its major findings that Pakistan was the largest recipient of U.S. military aid, receiving almost $5 billion since 9/11, with little in the form of federal oversight and accountability.

The House of Representatives recently amended the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). Among the newly expanded public provisions, White House task forces will be prohibited from operating in secrecy, transcripts or recordings of committee meetings will be electronically available, and advisory committee appointments must be made without regard to political affiliation or activity. The Center's Shadow Government project investigated FACA loopholes and several conflict of interest cases more than a year ago.

The Wall Street Journal featured the Center's latest analysis of the lobby spending by the pharmaceutical industry, health product manufacturers, and their trade groups. The Center found that the pharmaceutical manufacturers and their trade groups spent a record $168 million on federal lobbying last year, a 32 percent increase from 2006.

A new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), requested by the House Foreign Affairs Committee, tasked the Defense Department with providing greater oversight in the way it handles Pakistan reimbursement claims for coalition support funds (CSF), a program created after 9/11 to reimburse key U.S. allies in the global war on terror. In May 2007, the Center's Collateral Damage project found that post-9/11 U.S. military aid to Pakistan, totaling more than $5 billion, was subject to virtually no congressional oversight.

Washington Post national politics reporter Shailagh Murray in the paper's daily campaign 2008 blog, 'The Trail,' cited a Center interview with James A. Johnson, who recently resigned from Senator Obama's vice presidential search committee. In the interview, Johnson had "kind words" to say about veteran senator, and potential VP contender, Christopher Dodd.

On Thursday, the Senate Intelligence Committee released its Phase II report on prewar Iraq intelligence. Committee Chairman John D. (Jay) Rockefeller said: "It is my belief that the Bush administration was fixated on Iraq, and used the 9/11 attacks by Al Qaeda as justification for overthrowing Saddam Hussein. To accomplish this, top administration officials made repeated statements that falsely linked Iraq and Al Qaeda as a single threat and insinuated that Iraq played a role in 9/11. Sadly, the Bush administration led the nation into war under false pretenses." To read more about the Bush administration's false statements about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq, check out the Center's War Card project.

A Morning Call.com editorial cited a 2003 Center survey that ranked all 50 states' lobby disclosure laws. Until 2006, Pennsylvania had no lobbying law at all and was ranked 50th in the nation by the Center's survey. Currently, the legislature will consider a measure that would forbid gifts and entertainment from lobbyists to public officials.

Harry Shearer, actor, entertainer, musician, artist, and creator of the song 935 Lies - featured in his upcoming CD, Songs of the Bushmen - said in The Huffington Post, "Just in case Scott McClellan wasn't keeping count, the Center was: at least 935 falsehoods told by the president and his aides in the run-up to the [Iraq] war."

The Sunlight Foundation's SunSpots blog featured the "eye-popping reports" from the Center's Shadow Government project. The Center's Shadow Government project investigated a few federal advisory committees, part of a vast maze of committees, tasked with influencing federal government agencies on a variety of safety and policy issues, often done under secretive conditions with little public accountability.

Douglas Feith, President Bush's undersecretary of defense for policy from July 2001 to August 2005, was on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart May 12 and talked about the Iraq War. He said, "I think a lot of what the administration said was correct." The Center's Iraq War Card project, which documented 935 false statements made by Bush and six top administration officials in the two years following September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq, would prove otherwise.

Watch the world premier video of Harry Shearer's video "935 Lies." Shearer, best known for his work on The Simpsons, This is Spinal Tap, Le Show, Saturday Night Live, For Your Consideration and A Mighty Wind, unveiled a video satire based on the Center's Iraq War Card project, which documented the 935 false statements orchestrated by top Bush Administration officials in the two years following September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

The Sarasota Herald-Tribune's Kirsten Mitchell reported that Sen. Pete Domenici and 16 other Republican senators, who support the easing of offshore drilling restrictions on the Outer Continental Shelf for oil and gas, have received more than $3 million in campaign contributions from individuals and PACS affiliated with the oil and gas industry since Jan. 1, 2007.

The Washington Post's Matthew Mosk reported that Steven A. Betts, a top presidential campaign fundraiser for Sen. John McCain, was one of several Arizona developers who benefited from McCain-engineered land swaps.

TheStreet.com's John Stout cited the Center's Buying of the President 2008 chapter on Stealth Campaigns in "How Much Does It Cost to Buy a Presidency?" Political non-profit groups, such as MoveOn.org and the American Leadership Project, "will probably play an important role in this presidential election," he said.

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News Release
WASHINGTON, June 24, 2008 — Pharmaceutical manufacturers and their trade groups racked up another banner year on Capitol Hill, spending a record $168 million on lobbying in 2007, a 32 percent jump over 2006, according to a Center for Public Integrity analysis. Based on data obtained from the Senate Office of Public Records, the pharmaceutical industry has spent more than $1 billion lobbying the federal government over the past decade. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, April 15, 2008 — The Center for Public Integrity has won three 2007 Sigma Delta Chi awards in journalism for three of its investigations. Collateral Damage: Human Rights and U.S. Military Aid after 9/11 won first place in the online investigative reporting independent category; Wasting Away: Superfund's Toxic Legacy won first place in the online non-deadline reporting independent category; and States of Disclosure: Tracking the private interests of public officials won in the online public service in journalism independent category. With these three awards, the Center has now won a total of eleven SPJ awards since its founding in 1989. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 3, 2008 — The Center for Public Integrity is pleased to announce that David E. Kaplan has been named the new Director of its International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 25, 2008 — WASHINGTON, D.C. March 25, 2008 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the 2007 Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) award for online investigative journalism for Collateral Damage: Human Rights and U.S. Military Aid after 9/11. This recognition marks the eleventh time since 1997 that the Center has either won first place or was a finalist for an IRE award. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 23, 2008 — Leading up to the five-year anniversary of the Iraq war, the Center for Public Integrity has released the first analysis of its kind, "Iraq – The War Card: Orchestrated Deception on the Path to War." This comprehensive examination of top Bush administration officials' statements over a two-year period shows how top officials galvanized public opinion in the run-up to the March 18, 2003 invasion of Iraq.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 9, 2008 — The Center for Public Integrity has assembled an award-winning team of journalists and researchers to build one of the most comprehensive, illuminating, and frequently updated websites on presidential politics and fundraising, The Buying of the President 2008.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 10, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the National Press Foundation's 2007 Excellence in Online Journalism award, prestigious national recognition for the highest standards in the field of journalism. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 19, 2007 — It's been four years since the Center released its acclaimed Windfalls of War investigation, which first named Halliburton as the largest single contractor in Iraq and revealed the most comprehensive list of the top Iraq and Afghanistan contractors available at the time. That list included more than 70 American companies that had been awarded up to $8 billion in contracts from 2002 through July 1, 2004. By the end of 2006, U.S. contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan have grown to $25 billion, while oversight has seriously deteriorated, according to a new Center analysis, Windfalls of War II. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 13, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's Takings Initiatives Accountability Project was awarded first place in the outstanding online reporting category by the Society of Environmental Journalists. This marks the second time the Center has won SEJ's annual award in the online reporting category.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 28, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's lawsuit to obtain broadband records from the Federal Communication Commission was denied in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle on the grounds that public disclosure of the requested data would be "likely to cause substantial competitive harm" to the submitting companies. The Center originally filed its lawsuit on Sept. 24, 2006, in an effort to make broadband data publicly searchable by ZIP code. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 7, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's Hired Guns investigative project, featuring its lead story, "Statehouse Revolvers," has been awarded first place for excellence in the in-depth online reporting category by Capitolbeat, the Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors. This marks the fifth time the Center has won the annual Capitolbeat Excellence Award for its state-related investigative projects. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 19, 2007 — The state of Washington was the only state to receive an "A" for disclosure laws for its governors, while Idaho, Michigan, Utah and Vermont scored a "0," according to a six-month Center for Public Integrity survey ranking and comparing the personal financial disclosure requirements for the nation's 50 governors. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 13, 2007 — The Congresspedia Wiki Website today added the Center for Public Integrity's "Well Connected" project on telecommunication and media to its telecom, media and intellectual property policy portal. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 3, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity on Tuesday released a license for the non-commercial use of its Media Tracker, a free online database at the heart of the Center's "Well Connected" project on media and telecommunications. This new license, featured on the Center's website, gives the public and organizations the freedom to copy, adapt and redistribute Media Tracker data at no charge. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 29, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's efforts to ensure that government information about broadband deployment is made available to the public have created considerable interest among industry players and associations seeking to block access to broadband records based on competitive concerns. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 26, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity is pleased to announce the election of Geneva Overholser to lead its board of directors. Overholser, who has served on the Center's board for the past two years, was named during the June board meeting to succeed co-founding board member and chairman Charles Piller, who will step down to join the Center's advisory board. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 21, 2007 — Three federal agencies responding to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita awarded more than $2.4 billion in contracts using a controversial form of pricing that critics say offers no incentive for cost savings, according to an analysis by the Center for Public Integrity.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 19, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's Website was honored Monday by the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) with a 2007 Edward R. Murrow Award in the small market non-broadcast category.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 12, 2007 — Is U.S. broadband adoption keeping pace with other countries? How can American legislators, regulators and citizens better track broadband policy? What data do policy-makers need to make crucial broadband policy decisions? Experts from industry, journalism, think tanks and interest groups will convene to discuss these and other questions at a June 28th forum. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 7, 2007 — Despite a post-9/11 shift to emphasize terrorism in the U.S.-backed fight against drugs in Colombia, policy goals have been stymied by ongoing human rights violations and a wave of scandals linking scores of government officials to paramilitary groups designated by the United States as terrorist groups, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 31, 2007 — While U.S. efforts to combat terrorism have been somewhat successful in Asia, they have come at the expense of a deteriorating human rights situation in countries receiving record amounts of military aid, according to a series of investigations by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 30, 2007 — U.S. efforts to combat terrorism in the post-9/11 era have been marred by adoption of controversial anti-terrorism tactics from countries with documented human rights violations, according to a series of investigations by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). Tactics such as abductions and "targeted killings" have attracted the ire of some of the most committed U.S. allies as U.S. military aid continues to flow despite the criticisms.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 24, 2007 — Since September 11, 2001, U.S. counterterrorism and military assistance — including what critics argue are "extralegal" policies and practices that include "extraordinary renditions" — has strained transatlantic relations, according to a series of investigations by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 22, 2007 — Lobbying by foreign governments and concerns over terrorism have dramatically shifted U.S. military assistance programs in the post-9/11 era, according to a year-long investigation by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 18, 2007 — The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been reluctant to reveal critical information about 114 toxic waste sites where dangerous and possible cancer-causing substances could harm nearby residents, according to an ongoing Center for Public Integrity investigation, "Wasting Away: Superfund's Toxic Legacy." >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 10, 2007 — The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has collected $709 million from possible Superfund polluters over the past seven years and diverted the money into special site-specific accounts, according to a Center for Public Integrity analysis, effectively placing hundreds of millions of dollars out of reach of other Superfund sites waiting for cleanup.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 3, 2007 — Four companies connected by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to some of America's worst toxic waste sites have escaped more than half a billion dollars in pollution cleanup costs by declaring bankruptcy, potentially passing the tab onto taxpayers, according to a Center for Public Integrity investigation.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 2, 2007 — "City Adrift" highlights the Center's commitment to covering Katrina's aftermath, which originated with "Katrina Watch," a daily online summary and newsletter offering the best of Katrina-related news articles and links to the latest government contracts. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 26, 2007 — Toxic waste still plagues American communities 27 years after the U.S. government created a program to identify and clean up the country's worst sites, according to a two-part investigation by the Center for Public Integrity. "Wasting Away: Superfund's Toxic Legacy" reveals the beleaguered state of the Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund effort, uncovers the companies and government agencies linked to the most sites and tracks progress of the cleanup.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 12, 2007 — "Divine Intervention: U.S. AIDS Policy Abroad," a 16-country investigation by the Center's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), received a first-place Sigma Delta Chi Award for online reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 2, 2007 — Pharmaceutical manufacturers and their trade groups spent a record $155 million lobbying the federal government and its agencies from January 2005 to June 2006, according to a Center for Public Integrity report based on data obtained from the Senate Office of Public Records.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 29, 2007 — While federal advisory committees are tasked with giving the executive branch "objective" advice on issues ranging from the safety of prescription drugs to commercial airline travel, an ongoing investigation by the Center for Public Integrity has found that they sometimes are tainted by financial conflicts of interest, needless secrecy, industry dominance and outside interference. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 27, 2007 — Pakistan became billions of dollars richer after September 11, 2001, thanks to a Defense Department program that pays expenses incurred by U.S. allies fighting the global war on terror, an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) revealed. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 16, 2007 — Majority Leader Steny Hoyer raised more than $1 million for congressional candidates in the Democrats' 2006 successful run at controlling the House by exploiting what experts call a legal "bundling" loophole, an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity has found. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 12, 2007 — "Divine Intervention: U.S. AIDS Policy Abroad," a year-long investigation by the Center's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), received a first-place award from the Association of Health Care Journalists (AHCJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., February 1, 2007 — The Center was honored Wednesday as the first nonprofit investigative journalism organization ever to be cited by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government for its "superb investigative work in the public interest."  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 26, 2007 — Congress and state governments take on ethics reform. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 19, 2007 — The Center for Public Integrity's lawsuit to obtain broadband records from the Federal Communication Commission has attracted industry-wide attention as major telecommunications companies and trade associations seek to block the release of the high-speed Internet service data for publication. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 11, 2007 — Global Integrity releases its 2006 Global Integrity Report, a major 43-country investigative report on anti-corruption and governance trends.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 10, 2007 — The annual ICIJ Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting — two $10,000 first-place prizes and up to five $1,000 finalist awards — is open for entries.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 3, 2007 — The Center reported that privately funded travel for members of Congress and their aides has fallen sharply. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 21, 2006 — Campaign consultants who turn to lobbying once elections are over pose an ethical dilemma to some legislators, political experts and even some consultants who consider pursuing these relationships to further other clients' interests as inappropriate and unhealthy, an investigation of the practice by the Center for Public Integrity has found. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 19, 2006 — Americans for Limited Government, the Chicago-based tax-exempt organization chaired by New York political activist Howard Rich, has been forced to move out of Illinois because it could not comply with the state's charity laws, the Center for Public Integrity reported today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 14, 2006 — Acting Executive Director Wendell Rawls testifies before a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) public hearing at Belmont University in Nashville on FCC media regulations. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 13, 2006 — The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has been slow to allow the procurement of generic antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) to treat HIV/AIDS patients, instead favoring more expensive brand-name drugs, according to a new report by the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 30, 2006 — On the eve of World AIDS Day (Dec. 1), the Center for Public Integrity today released "Divine Intervention," a year-long investigation into how President Bush's $15 billion initiative for care, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS abroad has failed countries struggling with the pandemic. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 20, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity announced today that Jane McDonnell, president of Public Access Journalism (PAJ) and former managing editor at the nation's second largest news service, has been named Director of Marketing Communications. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 14, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity today announced the creation of an advisory committee of academics, entrepreneurs and industry experts on behalf of its Well Connected telecommunications project.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 14, 2006 — Marina Walker Guevara, a reporter at the Center for Public Integrity in Washington, has won Reuters-IUCN's 2006 Media Award for Excellence in Environmental Reporting for her work examining the dire consequences of lead poisoning of a small Peruvian community and its children. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 25, 2006 — A Chicago-based tax-exempt organization that has been bankrolling takings initiatives in more than a half-dozen Western states — including all five with measures on the ballot this November 7 — continued to dispense millions of dollars even after its authority to do business had been revoked by Illinois authorities, the Center for Public Integrity reported today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 23, 2006 — William E. Buzenberg, senior vice president of news for American Public Media / Minnesota Public Radio, who is nationally recognized as one of public broadcasting's most innovative leaders, has been named Executive Director of the Center for Public Integrity, the nonpartisan, non-advocacy, independent journalism organization announced today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 17, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity announces updates to "Well Connected," a project on the political influence of the telecommunications and media industries. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 17, 2006 — The Department of Justice charged former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Lester M. Crawford with criminal violations on Oct. 16 for withholding financial information, including his ownership of stock in companies his agency regulated.Go to the Center for Public Integrity's reports on the FDA. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 10, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity was honored with the coveted General Excellence in Online Journalism Award for small Web sites. The awards are presented by the Online News Association and the University of South California's Annenberg School of Communications.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 5, 2006 — Howard Ahmanson, Jr., a wealthy resident of Orange County, who's the second-largest financial backer of California's Proposition 90, says he's not acting in concert with the ballot initiative's chief financer, New York real estate investor Howard Rich, who has directed $3.3 million into the effort. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 3, 2006 — Ballot initiatives that seek to restrict "regulatory takings" will be put to voters in at least four Western states — Arizona, California, Idaho, and Washington — on November 7, 2006. Although the potential impact of these initiatives is far-reaching — all would generally require landowners to be compensated for government regulations that reduce property value – citizens and journalists in these four states have had little way of determining who's underwriting the multimillion-dollar campaigns to amend their state constitutions. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 28, 2006 — A federal court granted partial summary judgment to the Center for Public Integrity yesterday in a lawsuit brought against the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under the Freedom of Information Act. Emmet G. Sullivan ordered the FERC to turn over redacted versions of 256 e-mail messages by Oct. 16. The Center filed suit in December 2004, seeking the release of the e-mails. The commission had claimed a deliberative process privilege for the messages in their entirety, but the court determined that many contained portions that could be released. The government could appeal this decision.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 25, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity today filed suit against the Federal Communications Commission for failure to provide a database of records requested under the Freedom of Information Act. The lawsuit alleges that the FCC has failed to provide the Center with an electronic copy of a database about the companies that provide broadband within particular zip codes in the United States. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 18, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity, with the support of the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, presents findings from a sixth-month investigation into campaign consulting. "Campaign Consultants: the Price of Democracy" looks into the world of consultants and the skyrocketing costs of federal races that, in part, are underwritten by special interests. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 7, 2006 — The Indonesian national intelligence agency used a former Indonesian president's charitable foundation to hire a Washington lobbying firm to press the U.S. government for a full resumption of controversial military training programs in the country, a new report by the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists reveals. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 6, 2006 — Two months after Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., went to Africa to help set up deals for iGate, Inc., a telecommunications company, the congressman led a delegation that included several U.S. lawmakers on a weeklong tour of Brazilian cities, sponsored, in part, by the same firm. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 30, 2006 — Members of Congress and their aides accepted more than $600,000 in free travel from pharmaceutical interests and their allies during a 5½-year period in which drug company profits climbed, in part due to federal legislation favorable to the industry, according to a new study by the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 10, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the 2006 CapitolBeat Award for in-depth state government reporting online for its ongoing projects, "Pushing Prescriptions in the States" and "Well Connected in the States." >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 25, 2006 — Drew Clark, one of America's premier journalists covering the telecommunications industry and the laws that govern it, will be joining the Center for Public Integrity on August 14 to lead its global media and telecommunications project, "Well Connected." >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 8, 2006 — While working as the chief of staff to then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, Susan Hirschmann was among the congressional staffers who accepted privately funded travel with the highest dollar value, even though all of her trips were taken in a short span of about 2 years, according to a new report by the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 8, 2006 — About a dozen lobbyists – representing tobacco, tele-communications, automobile, and other companies – accompanied members of Congress last year on a civil rights tour of Alabama, according to a new report by the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 5, 2006 — A new study of more than 25,000 public documents reveals that members of Congress are not alone in taking millions of dollars worth of privately funded trips. Lawmakers and their aides took nearly 23,000 privately sponsored trips to places from Kansas to Kazakhstan, at a cost of almost $50 million, according to a new study by the Center for Public Integrity, Northwestern University's Medill News Service, and American Public Media programs Marketplace and American RadioWorks>>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 26, 2006 — Former Enron Corp. executives Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling were found guilty Thursday on charges of conspiracy and fraud. The Center for Public Integrity was the first to report on this mutually beneficial relationship, identifying Enron as Bush's top "career patron" in its book, The Buying of the President 2000.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 24, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity's Executive Director Roberta Baskin has resigned and will be succeeded by Managing Director Wendell Rawls Jr., the Center's Board of Directors announced today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 4, 2006 — The U.S. House of Representatives last night narrowly passed new ethics legislation aimed at increasing lobbying disclosures. The vote was 217-213 on the measure, which now must be reconciled with an earlier Senate bill that contains stringent provisions. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 26, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity today launched a new comprehensive state-by-state Web site feature, providing visitors with access to nearly 7,000 personal financial disclosure filings submitted by state legislators, detailing their non-legislative employment, board positions and investment holdings. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 19, 2006 — On Thursday, China's President Hu Jintao is scheduled to meet with President Bush, in what will be his first trip to Washington D.C. since coming to power in 2003. Hu's diplomatic premiere in Washington comes amidst a long-running and rapidly escalating effort by the Chinese and Hong Kong governments to influence U.S. policy and public opinion. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 14, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity's "Well Connected in the States" project has won the Society of Professional Journalists' Public Service in Online Journalism award for 2005. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 6, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity has released a report today, detailing the multimillion-dollar lobbying campaign waged by the pharmaceutical industry to thwart state governments' attempts to reduce drug prices. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 28, 2006 — The U.S. Senate defeated today, by a vote of 67-30, an amendment by Senators John McCain (R-Ariz.), Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) to create an independent Office of Public Integrity to oversee lobbying disclosure. Center for Public Integrity research, however, shows that while under the oversight of the Senate Ethics Committee, lobbying disclosure has been glaringly un-enforced. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 17, 2006 — As members of Congress seek to distance themselves from recent ethics scandals, the Center for Public Integrity is reporting that new House majority leader, John Boehner (R-Ohio), conducts business in ways not so different from his predecessor Tom Delay (R-Texas). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 9, 2006 — Yesterday, President Bush visited the Gulf Coast for the 10 th time since Hurricane Katrina struck. Remarkably, on the same day of the President's visit, the Center for Public Integrity released an exclusive report , on how more than a billion dollars designated for hurricane relief has gone unused by state governments. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 3, 2006 — On February 27, 2006, 'The Providence Journal' ran a column written by the Center for Public Integrity's Executive Director, Roberta Baskin. Entitled, "Lobbyist Won't Just Go Away," the piece explored the difficulties Congress and in particular new House Majority Leader Representative John Boehner (R-Ohio) will have in achieving meaningful lobbying reform. Ms. Baskin's column has since been picked up by Scripps Howard News Service. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., February 23, 2006 — For 16 years the Center for Public Integrity has been an award-winning, independent, non-profit watchdog organization. Today the Center continues to investigate and publish reports on the accountability of government and business. Our work has proven influential, in light of a journalism industry that every day seems less willing and able to take on long-term, dig-deep projects of the kind we produce. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 31, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity is proud to announce that Marina Walker Guevara of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has qualified as a winner of the Lorenzo Natali Prize for journalism in 2005. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 29, 2006 — The Center for Public Integrity announced today the release of Katrina Watch, a new project tracking and producing news and information about Gulf state reconstruction, government contracts and policy following last year's devastating Hurricane Katrina. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 26, 2006 — During today's news conference, President Bush was asked whether or not he meets with lobbyists. His answer, "I try not to," did not paint a complete picture. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 3, 2006 — Lobbyist Jack Abramoff's guilty plea to corruption, fraud and tax evasion charges should bring important changes to the lobbying industry, according to Roberta Baskin, executive director of the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 21, 2005 — An ABC News 20/20 report documenting systematic sexual exploitation of girls and boys by UN peacekeepers and civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo has been awarded the Outstanding Investigative Reporting prize for 2005 by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, the international arm of the Center for Public Integrity. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 19, 2005 — Pulitzer-Prize winning investigative journalist Wendell Rawls Jr. has been named Managing Director of The Center for Public Integrity, the Center's Executive Director Roberta Baskin announced today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 15, 2005 — The Center for Public Integrity recently issued a correction on its story "Traveling Executive Class" about White House staff and officials accepting travel sponsored by corporations, lobbying organizations, universities and other outside groups. The discovery of some data errors led to an extensive internal review of our data-handling procedures, after which the Center's editors decided to remove the entire "Traveling Executive Class" report from the Center's Web site until the investigation was completed. As a result of the investigation, new, stringent safeguards have been instituted to ensure accuracy. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 18, 2005 — When consumer advocate Martin Cohen was appointed head of the Illinois Commerce Commission, his job was to balance the interests of ratepayers against those of the utility industry. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 16, 2005 — Vice President Dick Cheney and his staff have been declaring themselves exempt from the travel disclosure laws followed by the rest of the White House, a Center for Public Integrity investigation released today found. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 7, 2005 — The Center for Public Integrity announced Monday that it has been awarded a two-year, $700,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to extend Well Connected, its landmark investigation of the telecommunications industry, to a global level. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 28, 2005 — After five years of motions, depositions, discovery, and legal arguments, United States District Judge John R. Bates granted the Center for Public Integrity's motion for summary judgment in a lawsuit brought against us by OAO Alfa Bank and two of its top executives, Mikhail Fridman and Pyotr Aven. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 21, 2005 — Members of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists are among the world's best investigative reporters, a special cadre of journalists who explore the world with unusually perceptive and skeptical eyes. They examine and challenge, and tell their fellow citizens of the planet what is happening that seriously affects them. >>
News Release
, September 8, 2005 — During the pre-publication review process for a Center for Public Integrity investigative report, we learned that one of our writers, Robert Moore, had taken material from other publications and included it word for word in material he had submitted to us with no indication that it was the work of other writers. We confronted Moore with unambiguous evidence, and insisted he resign. He complied. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 14, 2005 — The Center for Public Integrity Web site was singled out by the Radio and Television News Directors Association for excellence in a small market, the Center announced today. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 4, 2005 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the Investigative Reporters and Editors 2004 Award in online reporting for its exhaustive report on Pentagon contracting. Another Center report documenting political influence in the international oil industry was named a finalist in the same category. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 3, 2005 — Roberta Baskin, one of the nation's preeminent investigative journalists, has been named executive director of the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit, nonpartisan investigative reporting and research organization based in Washington, D.C. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., December 8, 2004 — A seven-part investigative report that revealed the widespread violence directed at Peace Corps volunteers won the 2004 ICIJ Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 15, 2004 — The Center for Public Integrity received two national journalism awards over the weekend for its innovative and comprehensive reporting on so-called 527 political committees. The reports, entitled "Silent Partners," listed – for the first time – all the 527 committees, how they were organized and how they spent their vast contributions. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., October 22, 2004 — Charles Lewis, founder and executive director of the Center for Public Integrity, received the 2004 PEN USA First Amendment Award at a ceremony in Los Angeles Wednesday night. PEN USA is dedicated to advancing free press and free speech issues. Its 1,200 strong membership includes poets, playwrights, essayists, novelists, television and screenwriters, critics, historians, editors, journalists and translators dedicated to protecting the rights of writers around the world. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 29, 2004 — The Center for Public Integrity today filed lawsuits against the Department of Justice and the Office of Personnel Management for failure to provide documents requested under the Freedom of Information Act. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 27, 2004 — Charles Lewis, founder of the Center for Public Integrity, will step down in January 2005 as executive director of the nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization based in Washington, D.C. He will continue to serve on the Center's Board of Directors and also play a leadership role on endowment and other long-term, strategic, institutional development issues. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 14, 2004 — The Center for Public Integrity has been awarded the 2003 Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service in the online journalism category. This is the third year in a row that the Center has won this award which is sponsored by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., February 17, 2004 — The Center for Public Integrity has been awarded the first George Polk Award for Internet Reporting, Long Island University announced today.

The Center won the award for its report, "Windfalls of War," a six-month investigation of American postwar contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan. 
>>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 20, 2003 — A two-part investigative report that revealed the inner workings of the Shiite terrorist group Hezbollah and its global reach won the 2003 ICIJ Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting. >>
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WASHINGTON, D.C., November 17, 2003 — "Well Connected," a telecommunications project of the Center for Public Integrity, won first prize in Enterprise Reporting in the independent category at the Online News Awards ceremony in Evanston, Illinois, on November 15. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 28, 2003 — The Center for Public Integrity won two 2002 Sigma Delta Chi awards given by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 20, 2003 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the Investigative Reporters and Editors national book award for 2002, for Capitol Offenders: How Private Interests Govern Our States, published by Public Integrity Books. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 1, 2002 — The Center for Public Integrity has won the Society of Professional Journalists' prestigious 2001 Sigma Delta Chi Awards for excellence in journalism. The Center won the award in the "Public service in online journalism (independent)" category for its report "Watchdogs on Short Leashes," released Dec. 13 last year. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 27, 2000 — The largest media firms have gained the kind of access to the political process that only money can buy. "Off the Record: What Media Corporations Don't Tell You About Their Legislative Agendas" documents the influence that the large broadcasting, cable and publishing conglomerates wield in Washington. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 27, 2000 — Lt. Gen. Claudia J. Kennedy, the first female three-star general in the history of the U.S. Army and the accuser in a sexual harassment scandal, was in business with controversial Democratic money man Terence McAuliffe for almost two years, The Public i has learned.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 30, 2000 — Pentagon officials, under pressure to investigate alleged links between elite U.S. military trainers and Colombian forces implicated in a 1997 civilian massacre, have confirmed that they trained soldiers commanded by the officer accused of masterminding the attack.  >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 21, 2000 — For as little as $5,000, corporations are buying access to presidential candidate George W. Bush, along with key Bush strategist Karl Rove — not to mention potential protection from billions of dollars in lawsuits. >>
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WASHINGTON, D.C., February 24, 2000 — Steve Bradshaw and Mike Robinson won the 1999 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists' Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting for a BBC documentary exposing deliberate international inaction to stop the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. >>
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WASHINGTON, D.C., February 11, 2000 — A bill Sen. McCain proposed in October would enrich a few of those well-heeled corporations — the large telecommunications firms that have bankrolled much of his political career. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 25, 2000 — Forbes' top ten career patrons, six are Wall Street investment bankers, who earn the lion's share of their income speculating in the stock market. All that income would be tax-free under Forbes' flat-tax proposal. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 18, 2000 — When George W. Bush first embarked on a deal to buy the Texas Rangers professional baseball team in 1988, he already had his eye on the governor's mansion in Austin. But he knew that to have a shot at winning, he would need better credentials than a string of unsuccessful oil companies and a failed bid for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1989 he told Time magazine, "My biggest liability in Texas is the question, 'What's the boy ever done?' He could be riding on Daddy's name." >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 11, 2000 — On Sept. 7, 1995, Vice President Albert Gore Jr., stood on the White House lawn and talked in sweeping terms about ending the era of big government. He touted a list of recommendations formulated by the National Performance Review, an initiative Gore directed that he claimed streamlined the federal bureaucracy, cut unnecessary waste and helped make the government 'work better and cost less'. >>
News Release
, January 6, 2000 — Democratic presidential candidate Bill Bradley laid out his plans for tax reform on Jan. 4, attacking corporate tax shelters and special interest provisions. Bradley is certainly an expert on the subject; in 1986, he was the driving force behind the biggest tax giveaway to special interests ever. >>
News Release
WASHINGTON, D.C., January 5, 2000 — Each of the leading presidential candidates for the 2000 election has done public- policy favors for his campaign contributors, according to a new Center for Public Integrity book, The Buying of the President 2000 (Avon). Every major White House contender who has held past elective office has 'career patrons,' or longtime financial sponsors, who have underwritten his political career. And every major aspirant has used his government position to help his patrons. >>

 
 
THE CENTER ON
For decades, Indian pharmaceutical companies have manufactured and supplied low-cost generic medicines, such as the life-saving antiretroviral drugs prescribed to AIDS patients. But recent changes in India’s patent law could soon make these drugs unaffordable in many parts of the world.
Watch “Patients vs. Patents” on the website of HDNet’s Dan Rather Reports for the Center’s investigation into how global pharmaceutical giants, with the help of the U.S. government, have changed India’s patent law for their own benefit.


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