Reuters, New York Times win Pulitzers for coverage of racial injustice,
COVID-19
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[June 12, 2021]
By Jonathan Allen and Gabriella Borter
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Reuters and the
Minneapolis Star Tribune each won a Pulitzer Prize on Friday for
journalism about racial inequities in U.S. policing, while the New York
Times and the Atlantic were honored for chronicling the COVID-19
pandemic, the two topics that dominated last year's headlines.
The Star Tribune won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news reporting
for what the board called its "urgent, authoritative and nuanced"
coverage of the murder of George Floyd at the hands of the police last
May, while Reuters and the Atlantic shared the award for explanatory
reporting.
The Pulitzer Prizes are the most prestigious awards in American
journalism and have been handed out since 1917, when newspaper publisher
Joseph Pulitzer established them in a bequest to New York's Columbia
University in his will.
In 2020, "the nation's news organizations faced the complexity of
sequentially covering a global pandemic, a racial reckoning and a
bitterly contested presidential election," Mindy Marques, co-chair of
the Pulitzer Board, said at the announcement ceremony, which was
broadcast online.
The board cited Reuters reporters Andrew Chung, Lawrence Hurley, Andrea
Januta, Jaimi Dowdell and Jackie Botts for the "pioneering data
analysis" of their 'Shielded' series, which showed how an obscure
legal doctrine of 'qualified immunity' shielded police who use excessive
force from prosecution.
Reuters Editor-in-Chief Alessandra Galloni said in a statement that the
series shaped the debate over how to reform American policing.
"In a year of tumultuous protest over police killings of Black
Americans, 'Shielded' was a work of tremendous moral force about the
intractable problem facing the world's most powerful democracy, the
legacy of racial injustice," her statement said.
The Pulitzer Prize for Reuters, a unit of Thomson Reuters, was the
newsroom's ninth since 2008, and sixth in the last four years.
The Reuters team shared the explanatory reporting award with The
Atlantic's Ed Yong, who was praised by the board for "a series of lucid,
definitive pieces on the COVID-19 pandemic."
A SINGLE CASE
Reuters' series of policing stories were sparked by a single case - and
took a lengthy, complex data analysis to complete.
In April 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to revive an unarmed
suspect's lawsuit accusing a Houston officer of unconstitutional
excessive force for shooting him in the back. Reuters Supreme Court
reporters Chung and Hurley teamed up with data reporters Januta, Dowdell
and Botts. They analyzed hundreds of cases and found that since 2005,
the courts have shown an increasing tendency to grant immunity in
excessive force cases. They then chronicled in detail the cases of a
range of police-violence victims who had been denied justice even after
courts found that officers had acted too violently.
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The Minneapolis Star Tribune won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking
news reporting on Friday for its coverage of the murder of George
Floyd at the hands of the police while Reuters and the Atlantic
shared the award for explanatory reporting.
The first Reuters story was published just a few
weeks before the murder of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died
in handcuffs as a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his
neck. The reporting had broad impact on the national conversation
about the problems of U.S. policing.
"The data that we came up with was cited in almost every major news
organization in the immediate aftermath of the George Floyd
killing," said Hurley, adding it has also been cited in court
filings and informally by judges.
SPECIAL CITATION
Many of the 2021 Pulitzer Prizes went for coverage of policing and
the global protest movement that erupted after Floyd's murder: the
Associated Press won the breaking news photography award for its
images of the protests, while Robert Greene of the Los Angeles Times
won for editorial writing for his work on bail reform and prisons.
The board also said it was awarding a "special citation" to Darnella
Frazier, the teenaged bystander who recorded video of Floyd's murder
on her cellphone, which it said highlighted "the crucial role of
citizens in journalists' quest for truth and justice."
The New York Times won the public service journalism honor, often
seen as the most coveted of the 22 prizes, for its "prescient and
sweeping coverage of the coronavirus pandemic." The Boston Globe won
for investigative reporting for uncovering a systematic failure by
state governments to share information about dangerous truck drivers
that could have kept them off the road.
Friday's announcement of the prizes, most worth $15,000 each, had
been postponed from April amid the pandemic. The awards luncheon,
which normally takes place soon after at Columbia University, has
been postponed until autumn.
The Pulitzer Board also recognizes achievements in seven categories
in the arts, and awarded its fiction prize to Louise Erdrich for her
novel "The Night Watchman" about an effort to displace Native
American tribes in the 1950s.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen, Gabriella Borter; Additional reporting
by Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Daniel Wallis)
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