The Bureau of Investigative Journalism
Nowhere To Turn
CONGRATULATIONS to Alexandra Heal of The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, who has been awarded the £5,000 Private Eye Paul Foot Award 2020.
With extensive and in-depth research, Heal’s series “Nowhere to Turn” uncovered the shocking story of how police forces handle domestic abuse complaints against their own officers. Her investigation has led to a super-complaint being lodged with the police inspectorate, highlighting how police forces have abandoned vulnerable women while seeking to protect their own.
After announcing Heal’s victory, Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye, said: “This year we decided to do something a little bit different. Because we had to. So rather than all go to Barnard Castle we decided to do this year’s awards ceremony virtually – as a big event in your front room. So congratulations to Alexandra Heal. Her entry was a terrific win against a really classy field of entries.”
Padraig Reidy, who chaired the judging panel of Francis Wheen, Simon Jenkins, Helen Lewis, Emily Dugan, Janine Gibson, Julia Langdon and Matt Foot, added: “The judges were tremendously impressed by the range of entries, and the emergence of so much new journalistic talent. It’s a privilege to honour Alexandra Heal’s important work, and the work of all the shortlisted entrants.”
The Shortlist
The other five shortlisted entries, who each receive £1,000, were:
Kit Chellel, Joe Light & Ruth Olurounbi
Bloomberg Businessweek
Is one of the world’s biggest lawsuits built on a sham?
Bloomberg Businessweek’s investigation of a case that went from the dancehalls of Ireland to the high court in London via the oil fields of Nigeria was an intriguing account that spanned decades and continents. With clear explanations of complex scams, it told an important tale about how London’s status as a hub of global corporate law can lead to UK politicians lobbying on behalf of the shadier end of international business.
Charles Thomson
Yellow Advertiser
Investigation into paedophile police informant
Tenacity on the part of local newspaper the Yellow Advertiser exposed how Essex police protected a known predatory paedophile and police informant, and then tried to stifle the results of an inquiry into the force’s behaviour. The fact that this investigation took place even as the paper faced closure (it has since relaunched) underlines the dedication of its reporter and editor.
Tom Warren and Katie JM Baker
BuzzFeed News
WWF’s secret war
Over the course of a year, the BuzzFeed investigations team revealed how one of the world’s biggest and wealthiest wildlife charities, the World Wide Fund for Nature, was complicit in torture and killing by rangers and guards at wildlife reserves, and how the organisation continually tried to ignore or deflect criticism, including through internally commissioned reports. The WWF’s allocation of funds to individuals and organisations suspected of abuses is now being investigated by authorities in the UK and the US.
Nadine White & Emma Youle
HuffPost UK
SPAC Nation investigation
Religious movement SPAC Nation was endorsed by politicians and local authorities for its apparently innovative approach to leading young people away from crime. But an in-depth investigation by HuffPost UK found many people who said that the church’s charismatic leaders were living the high life while junior church members were forced to take out loans they could not afford, and even pressured to donate blood to medical trial companies in order to boost the church’s finances.
Frances Ryan
Guardian
Britain’s disability scandal
Frances Ryan’s reporting has revealed how thousands of people with disabilities have been damaged by years of cuts to welfare. Ryan spoke to women in a range of extreme circumstances, from mentally ill women forced into sex work, to vulnerable people pressured into haggling with social services for legitimately claimed benefits.