American journalist
Michael D. Sallah is an American investigative reporter and non-fiction author who has twice been awarded the Pulitzer Prize and is a three-time Pulitzer Prize finalist.
Life
Sallah graduated from St. John's Jesuit High School , a college preparatory school in Ohio, and then obtained his undergraduate degree in journalism at the University of Toledo .
While working for The Toledo Blade , he received numerous state and national awards for his investigative stories into organized crime, clerical sexual abuse and white-collar fraud. He was named Best Reporter in Ohio in 2002 by the Society of Professional Journalists.[ 1]
Two years later, Sallah and fellow reporters Mitch Weiss and Joe Mahr were awarded the 2004 Pulitzer Prize [ 2] for Investigative Reporting for a series on the atrocities by Tiger Force , a U.S. Army platoon during the Vietnam War .
In 2005, he became an investigative reporter and editor at the Miami Herald , where he directed numerous projects including a series on public housing corruption[ 3] that won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting .[ 4]
He was a Pulitzer finalist for meritorious Public Service in 2012 for a series exposing wretched and deadly conditions in Florida's assisted living facilities.[ 5] He worked two years at The Washington Post , and returned in 2014 to The Miami Herald , where he was a Pulitzer finalist for Local Reporting in 2016 for stories that exposed a corrupt police sting operation that laundered $71.5 million for drug cartels—kept millions in profits—but did not make a single arrest.[ 6] He was also a Pulitzer finalist for International Reporting in 2021 for his work for the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and BuzzFeed News on the FinCEN Files investigation, which revealed the role of big banks in allowing criminal organizations to move billions of dollars through the financial institutions.[ 7]
Sallah has received other national awards for his work in accountability journalism, including The IRE Medal, a George Polk Award , a Gerald Loeb Award ,[ 8] a Heywood Broun Award , a Sigma Delta Chi Award and a Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award .
His reporting has been featured in three major documentaries (in which he also appeared), including Twist of Faith , an Academy Award-nominated feature documentary in 2004 about the clerical abuse crisis in Ohio, a PBS American Experience film in 2015 about William Alexander Morgan , an American who led his own fighting unit in the Cuban Revolution , and From Russia With Lev , a 2024 film that chronicles the Ukraine backchannel campaign that resulted in the first impeachment trial of Donald Trump in 2019.
Sallah has taught investigative journalism at Barry University in Miami and Boston University 's Washington DC program, and Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism Investigative Lab in Washington. He received an honorary doctor of humane letters by his alma mater, the University of Toledo , in 2017.
Works
References
External links
Gerald Loeb Award for Small Newspapers (1974–1983, 1985–2008)
(1974–1979) (1980–1989)
1980: Joe R. Cordero , Tim W. Ferguson
1981: Gary M. Hector
1982: Phil Norman
1982 (HM) Staff of the Sentinel Star
1982 (HM): Scott Abrahams , Alex Beasley , Sharon Carrasco , Jim Clark , Keay Davidson , John C. Van Gieson , Anne Groer , Noel Holston , Charlie Jean , Dean Johnson , Robert Johnson , Larry Lipman , Susan Taylor Martin , Jim Nesbitt , Jim Runnels , Thomas Sabulis , Wendy Spirduso
1983: Phillip L. Zweig
1984: no award
1985: Beth McLeo , Lawrence Spohn , Stan Swofford , Greta Tilley
1986: Mark L. Zusman
1986 (HM): Jan Brogan
1987: Brent Walth
1988: Paul Farhi
1988 (HM): Julie Bird
1989: Howard Gold
(1990–1999) (2000–2008)
Gerald Loeb Award for Medium Newspapers (1987–2008)
(1987–1989) (1990–1999)
1990: Andy Hall , Jerry Kammer
1991: Bill Dalton , Mike Hendricks , Chris Lester
1992: John Fauber , Jack Norman
1993: Pete Carey , Lewis M. Simons
1994: Larry Keller , Fred Schulte
1995: Susan Finch , Mike Hughlett , Peter Nicholas , James O'Byrne , Mark Schleifstein
1996: Bruce Locklin , Michael Moore , Debra Lynn Vial
1997: Liz Pulliam , Elliot Blair Smith , Cathy Taylor
1998: Larry Arnold , William Conroy , Rick Linsk , Nancy Shields , Terri Somers , John T. Ward
1999: Jenni Bergal , Fred Schulte
(2000–2008)
2000: Janet L. Fix , Jeffrey Taylor , Alison Young
2001: Ramsey Campbell , Sean Holton , Jim Leusner , Robert Sargent
2002: Pamela Coyle , Ronette King , Jeffrey Meitrodt , Mark Schleifstein
2003: Jeff Harrington , Deborah O'Neil
2004: Fred Schulte
2005: Jeff Plungis , Bill Vlasic
2006: Joshua Boak , Jim Drew , Steve Eder , Christopher Kirkpatrick , Mike Wilkinson
2006 (HM): David Heath , Luke Timmerman
2007: Gady A. Epstein , Stephanie Desmon , Chiaki Kawajiri
2008: Binyamin Appelbaum , Liz Chandler , Ted Mellnik , Lisa Hammersly Munn , Peter St. Onge
Gerald Loeb Award for Medium & Small Newspapers (2009–2012)
(2009) (2010–2012)
Small & Medium Newspapers (2013–2014)
(2013–2014)
Previously the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time from 1953–1963 and the Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting from 1964–1984
1953–1975 1976–2000
Chicago Tribune (1976)
Acel Moore & Wendell Rawls Jr. (1977)
Anthony R. Dolan (1978)
Gilbert M. Gaul & Elliot G. Jaspin (1979)
Stephen Kurkjian , Alexander B. Hawes Jr. , Nils Bruzelius , Joan Vennochi & Robert M. Porterfield (1980)
Clark Hallas & Robert B. Lowe (1981)
Paul Henderson (1982)
Loretta Tofani (1983)
Kenneth Cooper , Joan Fitz Gerald , Jonathan Kaufman , Norman Lockman , Gary McMillan , Kirk Scharfenberg & David Wessel (1984)
Lucy Morgan , Jack Reed & William K. Marimow (1985)
Jeffrey A. Marx & Michael M. York (1986)
Daniel R. Biddle , H.G. Bissinger , Fredric N. Tulsky & John Woestendiek (1987)
Dean Baquet , William C. Gaines & Ann Marie Lipinski (19)
Bill Dedman (1989)
Lou Kilzer (1990)
Joseph T. Hallinan & Susan M. Headden (1991)
Lorraine Adams & Dan Malone (1992)
Jeff Brazil & Steve Berry (1993)
Providence Journal-Bulletin (1994)
Stephanie Saul & Brian Donovan (1995)
The Orange County Register (1996)
Eric Nalder , Deborah Nelson & Alex Tizon (1997)
Gary Cohn & Will Englund (1998)
Miami Herald (1999)
Sang-Hun Choe , Charles J. Hanley & Martha Mendoza (2000)
2001–2025
David Willman (2001)
Sari Horwitz , Scott Higham & Sarah Cohen (2002)
Clifford J. Levy (2003)
Michael D. Sallah , Joe Mahr & Mitch Weiss (2004)
Nigel Jaquiss (2005)
Susan Schmidt , James V. Grimaldi & R. Jeffrey Smith (2006)
Brett Blackledge (2007)
Walt Bogdanich , Jake Hooker & Chicago Tribune (2008)
David Barstow (2009)
Barbara Laker , Wendy Ruderman & Sheri Fink (2010)
Paige St. John (2011)
Matt Apuzzo , Adam Goldman , Eileen Sullivan , Chris Hawley , Michael J. Berens & Ken Armstrong (2012)
David Barstow & Alejandra Xanic von Bertrab (2013)
Chris Hamby (2014)
Eric Lipton & The Wall Street Journal (2015)
Leonora LaPeter Anton , Anthony Cormier , Michael Braga & Esther Htusan (2016)
Eric Eyre (2017)
The Washington Post (2018)
Matt Hamilton , Harriet Ryan & Paul Pringle (2019)
Brian Rosenthal (2020)
Matt Rocheleau , Vernal Coleman , Laura Crimaldi , Evan Allen & Brendan McCarthy (2021)
Corey G. Johnson , Rebecca Woolington & Eli Murray (2022)
Staff of The Wall Street Journal (2023)