The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta native wins Pulitzer for exposé

- Brad Schrade Investigat­ions Editor

In some ways, Corey Johnson’s path seemed destined from birth.

While still a newborn at an Atlanta hospital, his mother held her baby and whispered a message sent from the heavens.

“I knew he was going to be a writer,” said Alma Mustafa. “God gave that to me. When he was born, he told me to whisper ‘My little writer.’ For three days, I whispered in his ear: ‘My little writer.’”

Some 47 years have passed, but last week Johnson, a graduate of the DeKalb County school system, achieved the highest honor in American journalism. He and two Tampa Bay Times colleagues — Rebecca Woolington and Eli Murray — won the Pulitzer Prize in investigat­ive reporting for a series that exposed toxic hazards in a Florida lead smelting plant.

The investigat­ive project, “Poisoned,” found the plant had endangered its workers and nearby residents in the low-income community around the facility. It’s the type of public service journalism that exposes wrongs, holds powerful institutio­ns accountabl­e and improves lives. It took 18 months of determined reporting to uncover the truth.

The team dug into thousands of pages of company records and regulatory reports. They interviewe­d more than 80 current and former employees, including 20 who shared their medical records. The stories led to a regulatory and community crackdown, safety improvemen­ts and more than $800,000 in fines.

Johnson is known among

colleagues for his generosity and his knack for finding big, impactful stories. He has traits essential to the craft: A natural curiosity coupled with an unwavering persistenc­e to keep going when the reporting hits roadblocks. He knows how to build trust with people so they share their stories, especially those who’ve been victimized by injustice.

“You have to connect with people,” he said. “The story is with the people. Data is great. Databases are great. Your story rises and falls with your connection with people.”

Johnson’s ability to connect is part of how he fell into journalism. He grew up in south DeKalb, was a voracious reader as a child and a gifted public speaker, even back when he was at Ronald E. McNair High School on Bouldercre­st Road. After graduation at Florida A&M University

in the mid-1990s, he drifted a bit.

He worked a retail job for a while and then moved back to Atlanta, where he lived in his mother’s guest room while working as a substitute teacher. He had never worked at a school newspaper when he read a passing mention about a little-known unit of the Atlanta Police Department that kept tabs on Martin Luther King Jr., during the civil rights era. He wanted to know more. Johnson started tracking down sources and records about the unit.

Those efforts eventually led to conversati­ons with editors at The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, including Hank Klibanoff and Shawn McIntosh. McIntosh, currently a managing editor, told Johnson that what he was doing was investigat­ive reporting.

“I said ‘What is that?’” Johnson recalled. “Can I get paid

for that because I need a job.”

In 2005, he entered a program at Vanderbilt University for minorities seeking to switch careers and become journalist­s. It was an immersive course that taught the basics over several months. Johnson then worked at small newspapers in North Carolina before moving to California to work for a nonprofit investigat­ive newsroom.

In his first assignment, he executed a 19-month investigat­ion that revealed thousands of public schools across California were deficient in earthquake safety standards, endangerin­g students and teachers. The series led to safety improvemen­ts in schools across the state. It was a finalist for the Pulitzer in local reporting in 2012.

This year’s Pulitzer is notable beyond the story it told. Johnson is only the sixth Black

journalist to win the Pulitzer investigat­ive reporting category since it was created in 1964. Johnson, several years ago, helped found the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigat­ive Reporting that is helping pave the way for a new generation of Black journalist­s to enter the field.

His mother, who today lives in Stockbridg­e, Ga., speaks to her son daily. During the reporting of the “Poisoned” series, when sources wouldn’t speak or when her son hit a reporting dead end, she turned to prayer.

“I told Corey ‘You pray and I’m going to pray,’” Mustafa said. “I’m going to remind God, he told me you are ‘My little writer.’ I prayed for those people to open their mouths and their doors so he can talk to them and get what he needed. I’ve been doing that all along for him.”

 ?? IVY CEBALLO/TAMPA BAY TIMES ?? Tampa Bay Times reporters Corey G. Johnson (from right), Rebecca Woolington and Eli Murray are announced as the winners of the Pulitzer Prize for investigat­ive reporting on May 9. The winning series, “Poisoned,” exposed dangers at a Florida lead smelting plant.
IVY CEBALLO/TAMPA BAY TIMES Tampa Bay Times reporters Corey G. Johnson (from right), Rebecca Woolington and Eli Murray are announced as the winners of the Pulitzer Prize for investigat­ive reporting on May 9. The winning series, “Poisoned,” exposed dangers at a Florida lead smelting plant.
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