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2001 Preliminary Judges
David Boardman is an Assistant Managing Editor of
The Seattle Times, with oversight of investigative and computer-assisted
reporting, the Sports and Business departments, news research and the
newspaper's legal matters. He has directed two Pulitzer Prize-winning
team projects: an investigation of abuses in the federal tribal-housing
program (1997 Pulitzer for investigative reporting), and coverage of
the Exxon Valdez oil spill and its aftermath (1990 Pulitzer for national
reporting); three other stories he edited were Pulitzer finalists. Boardman
has received other major national awards, including the Goldsmith Prize
in Investigative Reporting from Harvard University, the Worth Bingham
Prize in Investigative Reporting, the Investigative Reporters and Editors
Award, and the Associated Press Managing Editors Public Service Award.
He is a member of the Board of Directors of Investigative
Reporters and Editors. Boardman graduated from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern
University, and has a graduate degree from the University of Washington.
Jason Cubert is a second year Master's student at
the University of Washington School of Communications.
It is also his second year as a Research Assistant for
the Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma. While his
personal scholarship concerns itself with alternative
media, identity, and cultural studies, Jason's work with
the Dart Center has focused primarily on newspaper
coverage of domestic violence fatalities in Washington
State, following up that study by questioning journalists
about their approaches to DV coverage. Cubert is currently
interested in shedding light on the oft-ignored phenomenon
of domestic violence in same sex relationships.
Mike Henderson has been a lecturer at the University
of Washington School of Communications since 1994. He
teaches journalism-skills courses and is director of
the School's News Lab student news bureau. Prior to arriving
at the UW, Henderson was an editor and columnist at
The Seattle Times, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The
Everett Herald, Eugene Register-Guard and Anchorage
Daily Times. He continues to publish newspaper articles and reviews.
Among the publishers of his approximately 4,500 articles
are Newsday, the Los Angeles Times and others. He also
is co-author of several books, including "Why I Am
an Abortion Doctor" (Prometheus,
1996). Henderson's awards include a 1991 humor-writing
honor from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.
He is anthologized in "The
Best of the Rest," featuring columns by American newspaper writers.
Phuong Le is a reporter at the Seattle
Post Intelligencer,
covering neighborhoods and
civic issues for the past two years. She has also worked for the San Jose
Mercury News, reporting on education, and has covered crime and courts for
the Chicago Tribune. Phuong Le grew up in California, and holds a BA in English
at UCLA and an MA in Education at the University of Michigan.
Cindi Sinnema was victim advocate and
Program Coordinator for Separation and Loss Services
at Virginia Mason Medical Center (1992-1998). Her primary responsibility
was contacting families following homicides in King County,
and providing assistance with Crime Victim's Compensation,
the criminal justice system, and media interaction. She
also facilitated support groups for survivors, as well
as education and support services to workplace, church, school,
or community groups following a violent death. Prior
to that job, Sinnema was Outreach Coordinator for Families
and Friends of Violent Crime Victims (1990-1992), and
held an Internship with the Seattle Police Department Victim
Witness Unit. She is a 1990 University of Washington
graduate.
2001 Final Judges
Betty Winston Baye is an editorial writer
and nationally syndicated columnist for The
Courier-Journal in Louisville, KY. Other positions she has held since 1984
include metro reporter, assistant city editor, and assistant
neighborhoods editor. Previously, she covered urban affairs
for the Daily Argus in Mount Vernon, NY. Baye holds a masters
degree from Columbia University School of Journalism. She
was a 1990-91 Nieman Fellow, and has taught at Hunter College
and at the Poynter Institute. Among her honors are Best
of Gannett (column-writing), NABJ Region VI Hall of Fame
Award, and Black Achiever of the Chestnut Street YMCA. A
former off-Broadway actress, Baye has hosted and produced
a public affairs and African American cultural showcase, “The
Betty Baye Show” since 1995. She is the author of the novel, The
Africans (1983) and Blackbird (August Press,
2000), a collection of columns and original essays. Baye
is past national vice president of the National Association
of Black Journalists, a charter member of The William Monroe
Trotter group (a collective of African American opinion
writers), and is founder of the Black Alumni Network at
Columbia University School of Journalism.
John Briere, Ph.D. is president-elect
of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
He is Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Psychology at
the Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California,
Director of the Psychological Trauma Clinic at LAC-USC Medical
Center, and a Fellow of the American Psychological Association.
Briere is author of a number of books, articles, and chapters
in the areas of child abuse, psychological trauma, and interpersonal
violence. Recent books include Psychological Assessment
of Adult Posttraumatic States (American Psychological
Association), Therapy for Adults Molested as Children:
Beyond Survival, Second Edition , and Child Abuse
Trauma: Theory and Treatment of the Lasting Effects .
He is co-editor of the APSAC Handbook on Child Maltreatment ,
and author of two standardized psychological tests, the
Trauma Symptom Inventory and the Trauma Symptom Checklist
for Children, as well as four new tests in progress with
Psychological Assessment Resources. Briere is a recent recipient
of the Laufer Memorial Award for Outstanding Scientific
Achievement from the International Society for Traumatic
Stress Studies, and the Outstanding Professional Award from
the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children.
He provides consultation on clinical, forensic, and scientific
issues to various groups and governmental agencies.
David Handschuh is President of the
National Press Photographers Association. He has been a
staff photographer at the New York
Daily News for 14 years.
Before that he was on staff at The
New York Post and freelanced
for the Associated Press, The New York
Times, and other
daily and weekly publications. Handschuh has been nominated
three times for a Pulitzer Prize, and has received numerous
awards for photography from the Pictures of the Year Competition,
The New York Press Photographer's Association, The New York
Press Club, Society of Silurians, and many police, fire
and EMS organizations. Handschuh was a 1999 Dart Fellow,
and continues to work with that group to formulate a Critical
Incident Response Team for Photojournalists exposed to work-related
traumatic situations. He is an adjunct professor at New
York University, and co-author of The National Media Guide
for Disaster and Emergency Incidents. Handschuh lectures
often to photography and civic groups and to public safety
agencies on photojournalism, news and feature photography,
and on ways to improve the relationship between the media
and public safety providers.
Sonia Nazario is
urban affairs writer for the Los Angeles
Times. She
previously worked for the Wall Street
Journal as a staff
reporter covering social issues and Latin America, as
a summer intern for The Washington Post, and as
a reporter for El Pais (Madrid, Spain). Nazario received
a 1994 (team) Pulitzer Prize for local reporting of spot
news, presented to the staff of The Times for coverage
of the first day of the Los Angeles earthquake. She was
a Pulitzer finalist in 1998 for “Orphans of Addiction,” a
series for which she received a National Council
on Crime and Delinquency PASS Award, a Greater Los Angeles
Press Club-40th Annual Southern California Journalism award
for feature reporting, first place for Investigative and
Enterprise reporting from the California Newspaper Publishers
Association, and a Times Mirror Chairman's Award, among
others. In 1997-98, for “Suicidal Tendencies: When Kids
See Death as an Answer,” she
received a Life-Time Award and a commendation from
the American Psychiatric Association. Others include a 1996
Los Angeles Times Editorial Award for “Driven to Extremes:
Life in the Antelope Valley,” and a George Polk Award for
Local Reporting in 1994 for “The Hunger Wars—Fighting for
Food in Southern California.” Nazario has a master's degree
in Latin American Studies from the University of California,
Berkeley.
Susan
Russell is Project Coordinator with Vermont Victim
Services 2000, a national demonstration project to improve
the range, quality, and accessibility of services to all
crime victims in the state. A survivor of violent crime,
Russell has been active in victim services since the mid-1990s.
She was a Victim Advocate at Addison County Women in Crisis,
served as Chair of the Sexual Violence Task Force
of the VT Network Against Domestic Violence and
Sexual Assault, and currently serves as a consultant to
the Office for Victims of Crime (OVC). In 1998 she was appointed
by Governor Howard Dean to serve as the victim representative
on the Vermont Center for Crime Victim Services'
Victim Compensation Board; she has also served on the Vermont
Network Legislative Committee (1996-1999) and
was appointed by the Commissioner of Corrections to the
Addison County Reparative Probation Board (1998-1999). Russell
has spoken at workshops and conferences in Vermont, Toronto,
Hawaii, and at the U.S. Department of Justice. In 1995 she
was awarded Outstanding Victim Advocacy and Awareness by
the Vermont Center for Crime Victim Services and the VT
Network. Russell holds an M.A. in Public Policy from Norwich
University.
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