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DBpedia 2016-04

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Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Matt Apuzzo is an American journalist. He won a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting in 2012. In 2013, Apuzzo co-wrote a book with Adam Goldman called Enemies Within.Apuzzo was born in Cumberland, Maine and attended Colby College. He wrote for the Waterville Morning Sentinel while in college. He then worked for The Standard-Times in New Bedford, Massachusetts before moving to the Associated Press. He reported on New York City Police Department corruption and misconduct and revealed its collaboration with the CIA to conduct surveillance in Muslim communities. He won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting with Adam Goldman, Eileen Sullivan and Chris Hawley.In 2013, it was revealed that the Justice Department secretly subpoenaed his phone records as part of leak investigation into who provided the Associated Press information about a bomb plot foiled by the CIA. It was later revealed that the Justice Department had conducted leak investigations into his stories twice before. He has been highly critical of government secrecy and the media's willingness to accept it.Since 2013, he has worked for The New York Times.In 2015, a New York Times front page story by Matt Apuzzo and Michael S. Schmidt about the Hillary Clinton email controversy drew criticism for inaccuracies. Apuzzo and Schmidt had reported that inspectors general had filed a criminal referral to the Justice Department on Clinton over her handling of classified information. Kevin Drum wrote, \"virtually everything about the story turned out to be wrong.\" Though the FBI did open an investigation, the referral was a \"security referral.\" In December 2015, another New York Times story by Apuzzo and Schmidt (written together with Julia Preston) criticized the US government for missing crucial evidence during the visa vetting process for a woman who would later become one of the shooters in the San Bernardino attack. The director of the FBI dismissed the reporting as \"garble\" and it turned out that rather than having \"talked openly on social media about her views on violent jihad\" as stated in the New York Times article, the woman had mentioned these in private communications.The public editor of the New York Times called for \"systemic changes\" after these two erroneous articles by Apuzzo and his coauthors, which both relied on anonymous government sources. These problems were described as a \"red alert\" highlighting the need for more diligent and skeptical reporting and editing."@en }

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