Melvin Claxton | |
---|---|
Born | Melvin L. Claxton 1958 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of the Virgin Islands |
Occupation(s) | CEO, Epic 4D LLC |
Years active | 1982–present |
Known for | Pulitzer Prize for Public Service (Winner, 1995; Finalist, 2003) |
Melvin L. Claxton (born 1958) is an American journalist, author, and entrepreneur. He has written about crime, corruption, and the abuse of political power. He is best known for his 1995 series of investigative reports on corruption in the criminal justice system in the U.S. Virgin Islands and its links to the region's crime rate. His series earned the Virgin Islands Daily News the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1995. [1] [2] [3] Another series by Claxton, this time on the criminal justice system in Detroit, was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2003. [4] [5] Claxton has won a number of national reporting awards and his work has been honored several times by the Associated Press managing editors. [6] He is the founder and CEO of Epic 4D, an educational video game company.
Claxton began his journalism career at The Virgin Islands Daily News as an intern in 1983 while majoring in economics and journalism at the University of the Virgin Islands. Two years later, he became the newspaper's seventh full-time reporter. He went on to hold senior investigative reporting positions at The Chicago Tribune , The Detroit News , and The Tennessean . [7] He featured in a segment of Prime Time, the popular ABC-TV news magazine show.
In December 1994, Claxton wrote a series of reports for The Virgin Islands Daily News. The reports resulted in a series titled "Virgin Island Crime: Who's to Blame?" and identified numerous issues: criminals getting guns easily, law-enforcement corruption and incompetence, inept criminal prosecutions, judges handing out light sentences and a flawed probation system. The reports revealed the extent of criminal infiltration into the territory of the criminal justice system. The publication of the series had a significant impact on the whole judicial system of the islands that a new police commissioner and attorney general were appointed and a narcotics official resigned. In 1995, the series was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. [1] [2] [3] The Pulitzer committee stated: "Awarded to The Virgin Islands Daily News, St. Thomas, for its disclosure of the links between the region's rampant crime rate and corruption in the local criminal justice system. The reporting, largely the work of Melvin Claxton, initiated political reforms." [1] [8]
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