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Home · Articles · News · News · Eyes on the Prize
April 6th, 2005 WW Editorial Staff | News
 

Eyes on the Prize

WW reporter Nigel Jaquiss earns a Pulitzer.

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Editor Mark L. Zusman and reporter Nigel Jaquiss celebrate Jaquiss' Pulitzer Prize.
Forgive us if we're a little distracted.

But those shouts, air horns and popping champagne corks in response to the Pulitzer Prize announcement made things a bit frenzied around the ol' newsroom this week.

WW's Nigel Jaquiss was awarded journalism's top award Monday for investigative reporting in his series of stories about ex-Gov. Neil Goldschmidt's sexual abuse of a teenage girl in the 1970s, news that shook Oregon's political foundations.

Other finalists in the investigative-reporting category, according to the Pulitzer board, were Diana B. Henriques of The New York Times for "her revelations that thousands of vulnerable American soldiers were exploited by some insurance companies, investment firms and lenders,'' and Clark Kauffman of The Des Moines Register for "his exposure of glaring injustice in the handling of traffic tickets by public officials.'' Heady company, indeed.

We could say how rare it is for an alternative newsweekly to get a Pulitzer-you'd only need one hand to count them. We could recount how hard Jaquiss and colleagues worked to uncover a story that had gone unreported for three decades.

Instead, here's a summary of what others are saying about Jaquiss' work and the breakthrough of a Pulitzer going to a weekly newspaper:

Chicago Tribune (on Tuesday): In perhaps the most surprising Pulitzer announcement Monday, the investigative reporting prize went to Willamette Week, a weekly paper in Portland, Ore. Nigel Jaquiss, 42, a former Wall Street oil trader, won the prize for exposing an ex-governor's secret sexual relationship with a teenage girl.

The New York Times (on Tuesday): Jaquiss...who began his newspaper career seven years ago and is one of four reporters on the staff, exposed the long-concealed sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl by a former governor of Oregon, Neil Goldschmidt, almost 30 years ago.

National Public Radio (on Tuesday): As he researched the events of the middle 1970s, Jaquiss was stymied by the victim's refusal to cooperate with him, in apparent respect for a settlement agreement reached in 1994. The case also involved shady financial dealings with a private investigator, who reportedly acted as a go-between for the governor.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer (on Monday): The story was a bombshell. Its aftershocks aren't over. It blew holes in Oregon's close-knit power structure, sidelined the state's premier backstage fixer, embarrassed its dominant daily newspaper and damaged Gov. Ted Kulongoski. Kulongoski was a Goldschmidt protégé.

"Most politicians and officeholders in Oregon appear to have been terrified of Neil and his web of influence," said Dan Meek, a Portland consumer attorney.

The Oregonian, which was a finalist in the Pulitzer's national-reporting category for the newspaper's series on methamphetamine (on Tuesday): Goldschmidt's confession, which was forced by Willamette Week's investigation, shocked Oregonians who revered this leader as infallible. His downfall illustrated that no one in power deserves absolute trust-and that children are more likely to be exploited by the nice guy down the street than by a stranger in the alley.

The Associated Press (on Monday): Nigel Jaquiss stared off into space, his eyes brimming with tears as the news hit the newsroom of the tiny alternative weekly that he had won the Pulitzer Prize for uncovering a three-decade-old sex abuse scandal involving a former Cabinet member and governor.

"I never thought it would happen to me," said Jaquiss, 42, a former Wall Street stock trader who is now an investigative reporter at Willamette Week, a Portland weekly known for its edgy critique of Oregon politics....

Willamette Week, founded 30 years ago, has carved a niche for itself with its unflinching look at Oregon politics and its whimsical reviews of rock bands and cheap restaurants. The back pages sport racy personal advertisements and ads for male and female escort services.

But it has also established a name for going after hard news.

Blueoregon.com (on Monday): Willamette Week wins a Pulitzer ... You heard that right. Willamette Week. Pulitzer.


WW learned by telegram, read over the phone, that Jaquiss had won journalism's top prize. Said Jaquiss: "I didn't know Western Union still existed."
 
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04.05.2005 at 09:00 Reply
Congrads, Nigel & WW team!It's good to see that investigative journalism can still happen in Portland. I hope your team continues to follow up on leads to other Goldschmidt-related stories that have emerged during this one. I also hope this gets the message out to more folks in the media that some of those dirty little secrets that "everybody knows" in the newsroom need a wider airing... you know the other stories I mean :-) Once you've enjoyed some well-deserved champagne, go to work on some similar tales that we've all heard about for ages but have been afraid, for whatevr reason, to investigate properly. By the way, I've been using this series as an example in my journalism classes in the UK of how what initially looks like a "personal pecadillo" story can have far wider ramifications. Your win makes me proud to say that I used to be a Portland journalist.—Mitzi Waltz

 

04.05.2005 at 09:00 Reply
PulitzerCongratulations!!!—Doug Banks

 

04.05.2005 at 09:00 Reply
Congratulations!!My late wife was a coorispondent for the big O for many years. I know first hand the dilligence, perserverence and dedication it takes to follow up on "rumor mills". Because of your fine work, you well deserve this award. However, remain humble...don't set your sights on the larger dailies which will undoubtly court you. Stay with WW and continue to serve this comunity. Believe me, Portland needs you and the supportative staff and WW. The best to you. —KL

 

04.07.2005 at 09:00 Reply
yayformer portland resident and miss the wweek. we don't have any alternative journalism down here in southern calif like you do

 

04.07.2005 at 09:00 Reply
Congratulations!How absolutely awesome. I have read WW since it started. You guys rock!—Samantha Hamon

 

 
 

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