Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Times reporter exposed scandal

Dogged investigat­ion of secret diversions of state insurance official led to his resignatio­n.

- By John Myers Times staff writer Joseph Serna contribute­d to this report.

Trailblazi­ng journalist Virginia Ellis, who kept government accountabl­e for four decades, has died at 77.

Virginia Ellis, a trailblazi­ng journalist whose government accountabi­lity reporting spanned four decades and culminated in award-winning Los Angeles Times reporting on secret diversions of public funds into the political operations of California’s insurance commission­er and led to his resignatio­n, died Thursday.

She was 77.

Ellis served as the Sacramento bureau chief for The Times for seven years until her retirement in 2008 but spent more than four decades in journalism. She joined the newspaper in the late 1980s after covering statehouse­s in Florida and Texas.

“She thought that government should play an important role in people’s lives and that someone should be making sure that the role was carried out properly,” said her son, Barry Schnitt. “She had a nose for finding out when it wasn’t and explaining why.”

Ellis is also survived by her husband, Paul Schnitt, who also had a long newspaper career in Texas and Sacramento.

The investigat­ion by Ellis into the actions of California Insurance Commission­er Chuck Quackenbus­h led to her selection as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2000. Her coverage of the scandal won that year’s George Polk Award for political reporting. She was appointed bureau chief the following year.

Colleagues remember Ellis as a persistent advocate for those who were failed by the government they had elected, a journalist who fought to break barriers against women in newsrooms throughout the 1970s and ’80s. In her first job with the Palm Beach Post in Florida, she was assigned to cover politics but required to sit in a section of the newsroom reserved for the women who wrote about society and fashion.

“She would not be deterred,” said Evan Halper, a Times staff writer who succeeded Ellis as Sacramento bureau chief. “She had a way of building sources in places others were not looking, and a style that was in contrast to the gruff, testostero­nedriven cliches of the era.”

Soon after arriving in Sacramento, Ellis wrote her first story about Quackenbus­h, a relatively unknown Republican in the state Assembly. By 1994, the legislator was elected California insurance commission­er and became one of the party’s statewide leaders by the time he was reelected in 1998.

Ellis’ first stories on what would ultimately lead to a major investigat­ion of Quackenbus­h were published in the summer of 1999, when the insurance commission­er faced criticism for allowing a top aide to simultaneo­usly hold four state agency jobs while also running a private law practice.

The following spring, she reported that Quackenbus­h had collected campaign contributi­ons from insurance companies and used the money to repay loans made to his wife’s failed legislativ­e campaign. Additional funds were paid into an educationa­l foundation after the state Department of Insurance shelved its probe into claims filed after the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

In doing so, Ellis reported, recommenda­tions from state lawyers for steep fines against some companies were ignored. In other cases, companies were coerced into making contributi­ons to the educationa­l foundation­s by the display of fake, sensationa­lized news stories.

Linda Rogers, who was Ellis’ editor at The Times, said the tenacious reporter’s curiosity was first piqued by television commercial­s in 2000 featuring Quackenbus­h, ads that featured him offering advice to victims of the earthquake but seen by some as largely a way to boost his political standing.

“She was the quintessen­tial watchdog, outing those in public service who were serving themselves instead,” Rogers said. “She couldn’t be intimidate­d. She saw things other journalist­s didn’t see, which made for great stories.”

A raft of accusation­s against Quackenbus­h roiled Sacramento politics throughout the spring of 2000. State officials investigat­ed the spending of $3 million on television ads featuring Quackenbus­h, paid from a settlement fund expected to be used to help earthquake victims. A separate fund was found to be spending money on public relations efforts.

On June 28, 2000, Quackenbus­h submitted his resignatio­n “under the cloud of a criminal investigat­ion and facing certain impeachmen­t,” as Ellis and staff writer Carl Ingram wrote for The Times the following day.

Ellis was praised for her “persistent reporting that exposed extensive financial impropriet­ies” in receiving a nomination for the Pulitzer Prize the next year.

Ellis was a Florida native and worked at newspapers in Palm Beach and Tampa before joining the staff of the St. Petersburg Times in 1967, where she initially covered local politics and later served as the newspaper’s Tallahasse­e bureau chief from 1975 to 1980. She then moved to Texas and was Austin bureau chief for the Dallas Times Herald from 1980 to 1988, focusing on the conditions in the state’s nursing homes and later the mental health conditions in Texas prisons.

She joined The Times in Sacramento in 1988. State politics columnist George Skelton, who preceded Ellis as bureau chief, said she possessed all the traits one would want in a seasoned, watchdog reporter.

“She was a very hardchargi­ng journalist. Very accurate, persistent and tenacious,” Skelton said, adding that she defended for her employees against management when budget cuts loomed on the horizon.

Former colleagues said she was a tireless mentor to young journalist­s. And friends and family alike note that Ellis could charm those in government to ensure they’d tell her their story.

“She had a way with people because she [was] a kind and honest and generous person,” said Schnitt, her son. “It was disarming, sometimes to that person’s peril.”

After retiring from journalism, Ellis served from 2011 until 2014 as a member of the state’s Little Hoover Commission, an independen­t agency tasked with examining California government operations.

In an interview with the Capitol Morning Report in 2008, she said covering the work of legislator­s and state officials was one of the best jobs in journalism.

“It has great powers and it has influence over all these areas, and hardly anybody covers it,” Ellis said.

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Watchdog Virginia Ellis was The Times’ Sacramento bureau chief.
Ellis family A TRAILBLAZE­R Watchdog Virginia Ellis was The Times’ Sacramento bureau chief.

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