Journalism ran in Stern's family. His grandfather August "Gus" Stern was a copy editor at theWashington Post. His father Laurence Marcus "Larry" Stern also worked at theWashington Post, becoming assistant managing editor for national news.[2]
After using his psychology degree to work in several psychiatric hospitals, he turned to journalism at age 26. He worked for theSan Pedro News-Pilot in California and theStates News Service in Washington, D.C. In 1983 he landed a job covering the Los Angeles area from theCopley News Service's Washington bureau.[2] During the 1990s he wrote extensively about immigration issues. That coverage won him theRaymond Clapper Memorial Award (1997),[4] the Katz Award (1998) from theCenter for Immigration Studies,[5] and theJames Aronson Award (1999) for the story "America's Immigration Dilemma".[6] During the early 2000s he often reported from combat and disaster zones including Haiti, Iraq and Afghanistan.
He worked at theCopley News Service Washington bureau until 2007; the bureau closed in 2008.[7] He then worked forProPublica andThomson Reuters. He is currently an investigative researcher for Strategic Research.[8]
He earned the 2017Gerald Loeb Award for Video for his contributions to"Cosecha de Miseria (Harvest of Misery) & The Source".[9]
Stern stumbled across the Cunningham story while looking into congressional travel; unable to explain some of Cunningham's trips abroad, he did a "lifestyle audit" of Cunningham's finances and discovered a suspicious sale of Cunningham's home to a defense contractor for an inflated price.[10] His story, published in theSan Diego Union-Tribune on June 12, 2005, did not involve any insider leaks or unnamed sources; it was all based on publicly available information such as real estate sales and company websites.[2] Stern went on to write multiple articles about Cunningham's finances and associates,[11] usually with the assistance of Pulitzer co-winner Jerry Kammer in San Diego.[12]
The stories resulted in government investigations, which ultimately led to the exposure of sweetheart deals and outright bribery involving Cunningham and defense contractors whose interests he supported in Congress. "Without Marc Stern's story there might not have been a Cunningham case," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Phillip Halpern, one of the lead prosecutors. He considered Stern the "genesis of the investigation" and added "This is the first time in my [25-year] career I have predicated a case upon a news story."[2]
On July 14, just one month after Stern's first story, Cunningham announced he would not run for re-election,[13] and in November he pleaded guilty to tax evasion, conspiracy to commit bribery, mail fraud and wire fraud in federal court in San Diego.[14]
Stern and his colleagues later wrote a book about the Cunningham affair,The Wrong Stuff: The extraordinary saga of Randy "Duke" Cunningham, the most corrupt congressman ever caught.[3][18]
^abcdMeyers, Jessica (April–May 2006)."Stern Watchdog".American Journalism Review. Archived fromthe original on October 14, 2013. RetrievedOctober 14, 2013.
^abStern, Marcus; Kammer, Jerry; Calbreath, Dean; Condon, George E. Jr (2007).The Wrong Stuff: The extraordinary saga of Randy "Duke" Cunningham, the most corrupt congressman ever caught. Public Affairs, a member of the Perseus Books Group.ISBN978-1586484798.