Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ earn 22 top honors from Chicago Headline Club

- Sun-Times staff

Editors’ note: A version of this story in Sunday’s paper gave incomplete details on the winners.

Chicago Sun-Times staffers earned 15 top honors in the Chicago Headline Club’s yearly Peter Lisagor Awards for Exemplary Journalism.

Another award also recognized a SunTimes collaborat­ion with colleagues at WBEZ Chicago, which notched 6 of its own honors, bringing a total of 22 Lisagors to the Chicago Public Media newsrooms.

The Headline Club, an affiliate of the national Society of Profession­al Journalist­s, presented the awards Friday night at the Union League Club of Chicago. The honors are named for the former Washington bureau chief of the Chicago Daily News and recognize the city’s top print, web and broadcast journalism work.

Here are the winning Chicago Public Media entries for work published in 2023:

Best investigat­ive reporting: Dan Mihalopoul­os of WBEZ, Tom Schuba of the SunTimes and Kevin Hall of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, “Extremism in the Ranks.”

Sun-Times awards

Best data journalism (all media): Andy Grimm, Jesse Howe, Ashlee Rezin, Quinn Harris and Andy Boyle, “Voices from Chicago’s most violent neighborho­od.”

Best news photo (all media): Pat Nabong, “Tornado tree.”

Best illustrati­on or graphics (all media): Bryan Barker, “Creative Chicago special section cover.”

Best use of news video (all media): Stephanie Zimmermann and Brian Ernst, “Inside Chicago’s catalytic converter theft epidemic.”

Best use of data visualizat­ion (all media): Jesse Howe, “Where the money has come from in Chicago’s mayoral race.”

Best multimedia feature presentati­on (all media): “Voices from Chicago’s most violent neighborho­ods.”

Best column or editorial from a large print or online publicatio­n: Rummana Hussain.

Best sports commentary: Rick Morrissey.

Best email newsletter: Matt Moore’s Afternoon Edition.

Best headline from a large print or online publicatio­n: Paul Saltzman, “They were 2 Chicago pizza delivery guys. Then, they ran a Mexican drug cartel, feds say.”

Best feature reporting single story or episode by newsroom size and medium: Stephanie Zimmermann, “Inside Chicago’s catalytic converter theft epidemic.”

Best reporting on crime and justice by a large newsroom: Neil Steinberg, “The community stood behind us.”

Best business reporting by a large newsroom: Stephanie Zimmermann, “Inside Chicago’s catalytic converter theft epidemic.”

Best political and government reporting by a large newsroom: Frank Main and Oscar Lopez, “They were 2 Chicago pizza delivery guys. Then, they ran a Mexican drug cartel, feds say.”

Best community reporting by a large newsroom: Andy Grimm, “Voices from Chicago’s most violent neighborho­od.”

WBEZ awards

Best featured reporter or host: Erin Allen, “The Rundown.”

Best investigat­ive reporting by a large newsroom: WBEZ Chicago and the Investigat­ive Project on Race and Equity; “Profiled: The State of Traffic Stops in Illinois.”

Best reporting on crime and justice (audio): Mawa Iqbal, “Downstate Illinois leaders ask for help with end to cash bail.”

Best reporting on race and diversity (audio): Matt Kiefer, Ola Giwa, Leslie Hurtado, Taylor Moore, Angela Caputo, Jim Ylisela, Michael Liptrot and Alden Loury, “Profiled: The State of Traffic Stops in Illinois.”

Best political and government reporting (audio): Dave McKinney, “How admittedly corrupt ex-Illinois lawmakers get to keep their pensions.”

Best arts and entertainm­ent reporting (audio): Greta Johnsen, Anna Bauman and Brendan Banaszak, “Nerdette: Undercover.”

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