Miami Herald

WLRN and CBS News Miami clinch top prizes at Esserman-Knight Journalism Awards

- BY GRETHEL AGUILA gaguila@miamiheral­d.com Grethel Aguila: @GrethelAgu­ila

Journalist­s with WLRN and CBS News Miami won top honors for investigat­ive and public-service reporting at the Esserman-Knight Journalism Awards on Thursday.

The Esserman-Knight

Journalism Awards, now in their fifth year, were created to highlight excellence in South Florida journalism. WLRN and CBS News Miami — both Miami Herald news partners — were commended for their work.

Two Miami Herald projects also received honorable mentions.

“Shakedown City,” an investigat­ion into corruption in Miami, uncovered that Mayor Francis Suarez secretly received payments from a developer and juggled 13 side jobs. It was reported by Sarah Blaskey, Joey Flechas, Tess Riski, Jay Weaver and Susan Merriam.

In “Warehouses for Children,” the Miami Herald’s

Carol Marbin Miller explored the state’s longstandi­ng failure to provide adequate care to children with complex medical needs, resulting in the “tragic” and illegal warehousin­g of fragile children in institutio­ns.

Jim Brady, the vice president of journalism at the Knight Foundation, told the Miami Herald this year’s winners reflect various storytelli­ng methods, which are “impressive and important” given how people follow the news in different ways.“It shows the diversity of storytelli­ng,” Brady said. “For a long time, these type of awards were primarily won by newspapers.”

For Brady, the awardwinni­ng reporting demonstrat­ed the caliber of stories that are in South Florida but remain untold. That’s why the Knight Foundation has explored ways to empower local reporters.

“Sometimes, you don’t really realize what reporting means until you don’t have it anymore,” Brady said. “It’s incumbent for people ... to realize that there are so many other stories that don’t get told because of the reduction of journalist­s in South Florida now.”

Here’s a look at the rest of the award-winning reporting.

WINNERS

First place ($10,000): WLRN journalist­s Daniel Rivero and Joshua Ceballos for their work on “Unguarded,” which exposed how a nonprofit has sold the properties of those under its care to a Miami real estate agent.

Second place ($5,000): CBS News Miami’s Jim DeFede for “Warehouse: The Life and Death of Tristin Murphy,” a documentar­y exploring the treatment of the mentally ill in the criminalju­stice system through the suicide of 37-year-old Tristin Murphy.

Honorable mention ($1,000): Prism Reports’ Alexandra Martinez for “Digging for the Truth: Concerns Arise at a Tequesta Archaeolog­ical Site,” which delved into workers’ health and safety concerns at an ancient Tequesta site.

Honorable mention ($1,000): Bob Norman and Grace Tillyard, reporters with the Florida Trident, for “Sacred Scheme: How Florida Taxpayers Fund A Christian Campaign Aimed At Pregnant Women,” a story exposing how taxpayer money for crisis pregnancy centers is going to Christian ministries.

Special citation: Director Katja Esson for ”Razing Liberty Square,” a documentar­y focused on how Miami’s Liberty City neighborho­od is becoming ground zero for climate gentrifica­tion. It was aired on PBS.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Two projects from the Miami Herald, whose former newsroom is above, received honorable mentions.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Two projects from the Miami Herald, whose former newsroom is above, received honorable mentions.

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