Dayton Daily News

Former DDN reporter was two-time Pulitzer winner

- By Rich Gillette andy Josh Sweigart Staff Writers

Kim Christense­n, a member of two Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper teams who got his start in the Dayton Daily News newsroom, has died.

Christense­n, who died of cancer Monday at his Long Beach, California, home, was 71.

At the Orange County Register, he was part of a team that won the Pulitzer for reporting on stories about fertility fraud at the University of California-Irvine. At the Oregonian, in Portland, his work on abuse of immigrants by the U.S. Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service also earned the Pulitzer.

Retired Dayton Daily News reporter Wes Hills worked with Christense­n in the ‘80s, including an in-depth piece about an east Dayton crime family.

Hills said he and Christense­n did interviews for the story and parted ways for the weekend. When Hills returned to work, he asked if Christense­n had worked on the story and was stopped by managing editor Steve Sidlo.

Sidlo told Hills: “Don’t you touch it. That is the most perfect story I’ve ever read,” Hills said. “I sat down and read it … and I wouldn’t change a comma on it.”

“Kim Christense­n was the finest writer I ever worked with and I’m telling you I worked with some of the best,” Hills said.

But despite this talent, “he was the most unpretenti­ous human being you’ve ever known,” Hills said.

In fact Christense­n’s laid back demeanor disarmed people. “He made people comfortabl­e and they would just slowly really open up to him and tell everything,” Hills said.

A Dayton native who grew up in the Shiloh area and graduated from Chaminade High School and Wright State University, Christense­n was the third generation from his family to work for the Dayton Daily News.

His maternal grandfathe­r, Richard Cull, worked as an editor for Gov. James Cox, and his uncle, Richard Cull Jr., was a Washington Bureau Chief for Cox Newspapers.

Christense­n joined the Orange County Register in the mid-1980s after leaving the Dayton Daily News and then moved to the Oregonian in 1999.

Brent Walth, one of three other reporters who worked with Christense­n on the Oregonian story, told the Los Angeles Times that he was “the rare investigat­ive reporter who was truly a likable soul.”

“He did not like attention drawn to him,” Walth said. “He saw the work that he did as a duty and didn’t feel he deserved any special praise or attention for having done the work.”

Sidlo, a Dayton Daily News city editor at the time, said Christense­n could write about complicate­d issues with grace.

“He was such a graceful writer and reporter. He made people feel comfortabl­e when he spoke to them about stories. He was one of the very best I’ve worked with,” Sidlo said.

At the LA Times, Christense­n wrote about individual cases involving sexual abuse connected to the Boy Scouts. After retiring from The Times in 2022, he developed the material into a book, “On My Honor,” that he turned in to his publisher in December, shortly before he was diagnosed with cancer, the LA Times reported.

Christense­n met his wife, Chris (Davis) Christense­n, at the Dayton Daily News.

“We both started in the Neighbors section. Believe it or not, Kim started taking the Pet of the Week photo,” Chris said with a laugh.

“Journalism was in his blood from the start. It charged him, and news has always been a part of his life.”

In addition to his wife, who lives in Long Beach, Christense­n is survived by children Gayle (Keith) Rea, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and Michael Davis of Long Beach, plus two grandchild­ren and two great-grandsons. He is the son of Norbert (Chris) and Janet Christense­n of Dayton.

 ?? ?? Former Dayton Daily News reporter Kim Christense­n
Former Dayton Daily News reporter Kim Christense­n

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