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August 30, 2007

The steadfast reporting of Eric Nalder


Eric Nalder is no rookie when it comes to hard-hitting investigative reporting. A two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Nalder has a long track record of award-winning work:

  • When the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska’s Prince William Sound stunned the nation, Nalder and an investigative team from THE SEATTLE TIMES investigated the disaster and exposed weaknesses in the regulations on tankers. (1990 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting)

  • Staff reporters for THE SEATTLE TIMES, including Nalder, won the prestigious Goldsmith Prize for exposing the scandals of former Washington Senator Brockman “Brock” Adams. In the story, the team reported on how several women claimed they were sexually harassed and physically molested by the congressman over the course of two decades. (1993 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting)

  • In January 1995 an arsonist set ablaze a large warehouse in Seattle. Four firefighters died. Eric Nalder and Duff Wilson looked into the Seattle Fire Department's handling of the blaze and found the deaths might have been prevented if standard procedures had been followed. (1996 Society of Professional Journalists “Excellence in Journalism” Investigative Reporting Award)

  • Nalder and a team of reporters for THE SEATTLE TIMES investigated the mismanagement of housing funds for Native Americans on reservations. They found that much of the $3 million the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development distributed to tribal-housing authorities was improperly disbursed. Instead of sending money to low-income families, corrupt officials sent the HUD money to recipients who lived well above the poverty line, including a millionaire former pro-football player. (1997 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting)

  • Eric Nalder, Kim Barker, and Anne Koch investigated the abuse of elderly and disabled residents in long-term-care facilities in Washington state. In one case a husband abused and imprisoned his disabled wife on a sailboat while he was being paid by the state to take care of her. (2001 Clarion Award Investigative Reporting)


  • August 29, 2007

    Watch "A Sea of Trouble" online

    After the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989, oil companies assured America accidents like that would never happen again.

    But another accident did happen. On October 13, 2004, roughly 1,000 gallons of crude oil spilled into the Puget Sound estuary, near Tacoma, Washington. The spill blackened the beaches and waters, threatening aquatic plants, seabirds and fish. Unlike the Exxon Valdez spill, it was not clear who caused the spill and nobody claimed responsibility for the accident.

    Enter veteran journalist Eric Nalder. On March 22, 2005, the SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER published the first article in a series detailing the safety concerns of oil tankers belonging to the international energy corporation, ConocoPhillips. Although ConocoPhillips denied responsibility, the Coast Guard had traced the oil to a tanker owned by ConocoPhillips’ subsidiary Polar Tankers as early as December 2004. Nalder’s reporting revealed systemic problems within the company that were undermining the very safety reforms implemented in direct response to the Exxon Valdez spill. Safety concerns included requiring crews to work long hours, ignoring possible alcohol abuse by crew members, and company efforts to diminish tug escort requirements in Washington State waters. Moreover, Nalder found evidence alleging that crewmembers aboard another Polar tanker had participated in an oil-spill cover-up.

    In EXPOSÉ's "A Sea of Trouble," Nalder's doggedness and trademarked interview techniques help shed light on a murky situation.

    >> Watch "A Sea of Trouble" online.

    >> Read Nalder's original series in the SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER.