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PRELIMINARY JUDGES:
Garry Boulden is the supervisor of Crime Survivor Services,
a unit of the Seattle Police Department that serves victims of
person-to-person felony crimes. Boulden worked for five years
as an advocate in the Mayor's Office for Senior Citizens and as
the senior specialist advocate for the police department for seven
years. He is a member of Seattle's Domestic Violence Council,
the Domestic Violence Criminal Justice Committee, POET (Protecting
Our Elderly Together) Group, and other victim-services committees.
Boulden holds a B.A. in philosophy, an M.A. in theology (ethics),
and is a licensed Washington state mental health counselor.
Susan Gilmore has been a reporter at the Seattle Times
since 1979. Currently a general assignment reporter, she has also
covered City Hall, the environment, fisheries, politics (including
a U.S. Senate race), new features, demographics and census, and
she wrote for Pacific Magazine. In 1992 Gilmore was a
Pulitzer Prize finalist for stories involving allegations of sexual
misconduct by former U.S. Senator Brock Adams; these stories also
received the Worth Bingham Prize for investigative reporting,
the Associated Press Managing Editors Public Service Award, and
the Goldsmith Prize. Before joining the Seattle Times,
Gilmore was a reporter at the Juneau Empire and the Fairbanks
News Miner.
Janet Grimley is an assistant managing editor and part
of the senior management team at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
She is lead hiring recruiter for the paper, oversees national
newspaper contest competitions, and monitors the newsroom budget.
Over the past 27 years, Grimley has worked as a reporter, copy
and layout editor, and assignment editor. Before moving to Seattle,
Grimley was a reporter for the Quad-Cities Times in Davenport,
Iowa. She is a member of the Center for Human Services in Shoreline,
Wash., and board member and past president of the American Association
of Sunday and Feature Editors.
Paul McElroy is an author and visiting instructor at the
University of Washington School of Communications. Previously,
he spent 21 years as a reporter and editor for the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, Chicago Sun-Times, and other
newspapers. In 1979 he covered the crash of an American Airlines
DC-10 at Chicago's O'Hare Airport, which killed everyone on board.
McElroy's first book, Tracon, a suspenseful novel about air-traffic
controllers, won both ForeWord Magazine's bronze Book of the Year
Award and Independent Publisher's IPPY Award in 2001.
April Peterson is a doctoral student at the University
of Washington School of Communications and a research assistant
for the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. A former reporter
for the Morning Call in Allentown, Pa., Peterson's interests
include communications history, mass media law, representations
of race and gender in the news, and entertainment media.
FINAL JUDGES:
Angelo B. Henderson is a special projects reporter with
The Detroit News, covering race, crime, culture and other
issues that impact urban cities. Previously, he was a senior special
writer for Page One of The Wall Street Journal. While
at the Journal he won the Pulitzer Prize (1999) for his account
of the lives affected by an attempted drugstore robbery that ended
in the robber's death. He was named one of 39 African-Americans
Achievers To Watch in the next millennium by SuccessGuide magazine,
and in 2000 was honored by Columbia University as one of the nation's
best reporters on race and ethnicity in America. Other journalism
awards include the Detroit Press Club Foundation Award (1993),
Unity Award for Excellence in minority reporting for Public Affairs/Social
Issues (1993), National Association of Black Journalists Award
for outstanding coverage of the Black Condition, and Best of Gannett
Award for Business/Consumer Reporting (1992). Henderson has also
been a reporter for The St. Petersburg Times and The
Courier-Journal (Louisville). He earned a Bachelor of Arts
in journalism from the University of Kentucky in 1985, and is
currently pursuing a degree in Urban Ministry at Ecumenical Theological
Seminary.
Danny G. Kaloupek, Ph.D., is deputy director for the Behavioral
Science Division of the National Center for Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder in Boston, where he conducts research and provides training
on topics related to traumatic stress. He also holds a faculty
appointment in both the Department of Psychiatry and the Department
of Behavioral Neuroscience at Boston University School of Medicine.
Since 1994 Kaloupek has served the International Society for Traumatic
Stress Studies in various roles, including service on the Scientific
Publications Committee, the Program Committee, and Chair for the
1997 Annual Meeting. He has been a member of the ISTSS Board of
Directors since 1998, Treasurer and Member of the Executive Committee
since 1999, and Chair of the Finance Committee since 2000. Kaloupek
was a faculty member in the Department of Psychology at Concordia
University in Montreal from 1980 through 1989. He received his
degree in clinical psychology from Binghamton University in 1981.
Mark Klaas founded KlaasKids in 1994, after the kidnap
and murder of his twelve-year-old daughter, Polly. Previously
the owner of a rental car franchise, Mr. Klaas is now dedicated
to stopping crimes against children. Through the KlaasKids Foundation,
he has promoted prevention programs for at-risk youth, stronger
sentencing for violent criminals, and governmental accountability
and responsibility. Klaas is regularly called upon as a resource
for television and radio news channels, and has written editorials
for Newsweek, the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury
News, and the Cleveland Plain Dealer. He travels extensively through
the United States, encouraging innovative solutions and proven
programs to positively impact issues of crime, abuse and neglect.
He also works with numerous victim families and families of kidnapped
children offering advice, counseling, support and expertise on
ways to promote cases through the media, the court of public opinion
and the criminal justice system. Besides his duties as president
and executive director of the KlaasKids Foundation, Klaas sits
on the advisory boards of the Center for the Community Interest,
Fight Crime Invest in Kids, and the Crime Victims Report. Mr.
Klaas is a member of Team H.O.P.E., a program assisting the families
of kidnapped children.
Penny Owen is a staff correspondent for The Daily
Oklahoman, writing both news and feature stories in the Dallas/Fort
Worth area. She began her career as an intern at The Oklahoman
in 1992, working up from the obituary desk to police and general
assignment reporting. In 1995 Owen was one of the key reporters
covering the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building,
and one of two staff reporters sent to Denver to cover the trials
of Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols in 1997. She also covered
McVeigh's execution in Terre Haute, Ind. In 2000 Owen was a fellow
for the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma, and a William Randolph
Hearst fellow at the University of Texas at Austin in 1998. She
was also one of four staff members to participate in the 1999
Knight Foundation Newspapers-in-Residence program at Michigan
State University, where she spent an intensive week teaching 11
journalism classes about the profession. A Navy Reserve public
information officer, she served at the World Trade Center site
and on the hospital ship USNS Comfort, which offered respite for
rescue workers following 9-11.
Janet Reeves is the director of photography at the Denver
Rocky Mountain News. She began her nearly-20 year journalism
career at the Rocky as a lab tech, was a staff photographer for
nearly a decade, and became a picture editor in 1991. Two years
later she was named Director. Under her direction, the photo staff
won a Pulitzer Prize in 2000 for their coverage of the Columbine
school shootings, as well as the Robert F. Kennedy Award, Alfred
Eisenstaedt Magazine photographer of the year, National headliners,
numerous SND awards including a Gold Medal for photojournalism
and editing, and numerous POY awards. In 1998, 1999, and 2000
her photographers won the National Scripps Foundation Award for
photojournalism, and have swept the Colorado Press and AP Awards
since 1994. A Rochester, N.Y. native, Reeves studied fashion and
commercial photography in New York at the Fashion Institute of
Technology. Reeves taught at the Colorado Institute of Art for
five years, and has been part of the faculty of the Stan Kalish
Picture Editing Workshop and the Mountain Workshops at Western
Kentucky, and guest faculty at the Poynter Institute.
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