Duff Wilson is an Americaninvestigative reporter, formerly withThe New York Times,[1] later withReuters. He is the first two-time winner of the Harvard UniversityGoldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting,[2] a two-time winner of theGeorge Polk Award, and a three-time finalist for thePulitzer Prize.
Wilson graduated fromWestern Washington University in 1976, and from theColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1982.[3][4]
He has worked forThe Seattle Times,The New York Times andReuters and has served on the board ofInvestigative Reporters and Editors.[5] Since 2010 he has taught investigative reporting at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.[6] Wilson joined The New York Times in 2004. During his time there, Wilson covered topics such as pharmaceutical and tobacco industries along with sports-related investigations, mainly steroids. One article he wrote about theDuke Lacrosse Case garnered criticism, as the case unraveled.[7][8] Prior to working for The Times, he worked as an investigative projects reporter forThe Seattle Times since 1989. Before working here, he worked for theSeattle Post-Intelligencer and the Associated Press. At the Seattle PI, Wilson wrote that paper's story aboutGary Little. Wilson is also a webmaster of Reporter's Desktop.[4]
Wilson's father and brother published a weekly newspaper inWashington.[4] He has two children with Barbara Wilson, a high school teacher.
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