Alaska News

Anchorage Daily News, ProPublica win John Jay College/Harry Frank Guggenheim award for excellence in criminal justice journalism

Anchorage Daily News reporter Kyle Hopkins has won the 2020 John Jay College/Harry Frank Guggenheim Award for Excellence in Criminal Justice Journalism. He was honored in the series category for “Lawless,” produced in partnership with ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network, which detailed a sexual assault crisis in rural Alaska and how it is compounded by a significant lack of public safety services. The award was announced this past week.

Alaska has the highest sexual assault rate in the U.S., and the impact is felt disproportionately by Alaska Natives, many living in the country’s poorest and most remote villages. For the series, Hopkins traveled to some of these villages, including one where sex offenders outnumber police officers 7 to 1. With a lack of qualified personnel, some communities hired officers convicted of felonies, domestic violence and other offenses, while other far-flung villages had no local law enforcement of any kind. Hopkins’ comprehensive reporting showed how these conditions contribute to an ongoing but preventable epidemic of abuse and trauma.

Other news organizations receiving awards were CNN, the Intercept and the Greenville, S.C., News.

The “Lawless” series, which is continuing in 2020, is being jointly edited by Charles Ornstein from ProPublica and David Hulen from the Daily News. The ADN’s Loren Holmes, Bill Roth, Alex Demarban, Michelle Theriault Boots, Tegan Hanlon and Jeff Parrott contributed to the stories entered as did ProPublica’s Adriana Gallardo, Beena Raghavendran, Nadia Sussman and Alex Mierjeski.

In the wake of the investigation, U.S. Attorney General William Barr visited Alaska to learn more about the problems Hopkins highlighted. Barr declared an emergency for public safety in rural Alaska and pledged more than $52 million in funds as part of a sweeping plan to better support law enforcement in Alaska Native villages, including three new federal prosecutors to focus on rural Alaska, the hiring of 20 more officers, upgrading public safety infrastructure for Alaska villages and expanding tribal victim services. The U.S. attorney’s office announced it would hire rural prosecutors, and some communities will receive Alaska Trooper posts for the first time.

“This year’s winners demonstrate the critical role played by the media, locally and nationally, to ensure our justice system lives up to the values that sustain our democracy,” said Karol V. Mason, president of John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

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