Description:

A nonprofit, digital and bilingual investigative journalism organization working to expose corruption, waste and miscarriages of justice in Florida and Latin America.

Begun:

2010

Website:http://fcir.org/
Office Location:Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, International Media Center at Florida International University, Biscayne Bay Campus, ACI-394, 3000 N.E. 151st St. Miami, FL
Structure:

501(c)(3) organization

Founder:

Trevor Aaronson, Mc Nelly Torres and board members Sharon Rosenhause (president), Barbara Peterson (secretary), Joe Adams (treasurer), Dr. Stephanie Tripp, Mercedes Vigón

Executive Director:

Trevor Aaronson, Mc Nelly Torres (associate directors)

Approximate number of full-time staff:

2

Number with prior professional journalism experience:

2

Annual operating budget:

About $150,000

Annual salaries posted, or accessible via 990 form:

Yes

Editorial/ethics policy statement:

Yes

Diversity statement:

Yes

IRS 990 form posted on website:

Yes

Major donors disclosed:

Yes

INN Member:

Yes

Awards:

Education Writers Association, SPJ Sunshine State Awards

Contact:

http://fcir.org/contact



New Economic Models

Investigative News Network

Investigative News Network

This group of more than 20 nonprofit news organizations was formed in July 2009 to organize the best investigative reporting sites out there. Workshop executive editor Charles Lewis, one of the original four board members, announces the group's first CEO, Kevin Davis.

World Investigative Reporting Enterprises

World Investigative Reporting Enterprises

Inside the iLab, we are incubating WIRE, a new, online social utility platform bringing together the  best investigative journalists in the world. WIRE will publish original, multimedia work. This highest quality journalism will be organized, made digitally accessible and searchable and disseminated in an entirely new way, via social networks.

 

iLab Projects

Citizen journalists work undercover in North Korea to show daily life

Japanese journalists have been training citizens in North Korea to take audio and video recordings of everyday life in an effort to document the hardships, including food shortages, prevalent there. Meet the man behind the training, Jiro Ishimaru.