Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pulitzer winner Roe joins Journal Sentinel watchdog team

- From the Editor George Stanley Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WIS.

What can the Journal Sentinel offer of greatest value to the people of Wisconsin?

First and foremost, we have the newsroom size, skill and experience to produce investigat­ive reporting of a depth and breadth no one else can approach. We can hold those in power accountabl­e and serve as the citizens’ watchdog.

This kind of reporting is essential to self-government. Nothing gets fixed in our democracy unless enough people understand the problem and care enough to demand better. It’s how we improve and move forward.

Our nation’s founders understood this and wrote protection for a free and independen­t press into the First Amendment. When French political scientist Alexis de Tocquevill­e came to study our democracy, he wrote: “The greatness of America lies not in being more enlightene­d than any other nation, but rather in her ability to repair her faults.”

We are guided by this mission of serving our democracy. So we continue to invest more in our investigat­ive reporting team – long one of the nation’s best.

This week, Sam Roe, an outstandin­g investigat­ive journalist, joined our staff to lead the investigat­ive reporting efforts of the Journal Sentinel and USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin.

At the Chicago Tribune since 2000, and at the Toledo Blade before that, Sam has been a reporter, editor and team leader on major investigat­ions that have drawn virtually every national honor in journalism. Those include a Pulitzer Prize in investigat­ive reporting and four additional Pulitzer Prize finalists.

Sam joins a newsroom that also has received the nation’s top reporting honors, including three Pulitzer Prizes and six additional Pulitzer Prize finalists in recent years. As investigat­ive team leader, Sam takes over for Greg Borowski, who has taken on additional responsibi­lities and now oversees our local and business news operation.

If you ask Sam about an investigat­ive team’s most important job, he’ll tell you “public service” — striving to help improve lives by shining a light on wrongdoing, injustice and incompeten­ce while researchin­g best practices so we can find better ways.

“Now, more than ever, we need to fight the good fight, produce spectacula­r work, and demonstrat­e to the public that great reporting is essential to every one of us,” he says.

For example, a friend or loved one of yours has likely benefited from improvemen­ts made by pharmacies nationwide in response to the Tribune’s 2016 investigat­ion “Dangerous Doses.” Sam and his team learned that pharmacies were dispensing potentiall­y dangerous drug combinatio­ns without raising red flags to patients or prescribin­g doctors — a failure that endangered millions.

Just this week, Sam’s last project for the Tribune found that popular smart phones, including the iPhone 7 and Samsung Galaxy S8, emit radiation above levels deemed safe and far above what has been reported to regulators.

Great local reporting often exposes important national and even internatio­nal stories.

Which leads us to Raquel Rutledge, who will be working with Sam as our deputy investigat­ions editor. Raquel chose to work part time for her first 14 years as an investigat­ive reporter at the Journal Sentinel.

That comes as a shock to many who know of Raquel by her stellar work and its impact.

In recent weeks, for example, Raquel has led the nation in reporting about teens and young adults being hospitaliz­ed with severe lung injuries after vaping. Her daily reporting has been informed by her 2015 investigat­ion into the dangers of e-cigarettes, “Gasping for Action.”

Raquel also led the nation in reporting about tainted alcohol, blackouts, sexual assaults and drownings at all-inclusive resorts in Mexico – and about how TripAdviso­r and other sites suppressed warnings from victims. She won the Pulitzer Prize for local reporting in 2010 for “Cashing in on Kids,” which uncovered massive fraud in the state’s subsidized child care program, led to dozens of criminal conviction­s and has saved taxpayers tens of millions per year.

Now full time, Raquel will continue to report while we also leverage her superior writing, fact-finding and editing skills across our statewide operation.

We also recently added Mary Spicuzza to our investigat­ions team as a quick-strike reporter who can track down tips from readers and sources. After covering local and state government, Mary brings a wealth of experience to her new job, with a deep knowledge of how local, state and federal government works. Last week, Mary reported on how partisan “news” sites are popping up in Wisconsin to promote candidates in advance of the 2020 election. Another recent story revealed how lawmakers moonlighti­ng as landlords passed a series of changes promoting their interests at the expense of renters, local government­s and public safety.

Sam Roe’s eagerness to join our team says a great deal about the skills and abilities of our reporters and our continuing commitment to deep, evidenceba­sed reporting that matters.

We couldn’t do this work without our subscriber­s. If you know of someone who would benefit by receiving news of value to Wisconsin that is unavailabl­e from any other source (say, a college student heading off to school?) please consider sending a gift subscripti­on through jsonline.com/gift.

Thank you for supporting our work! Email Editor George Stanley at george.stanley@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter at @geostanley.

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