A years-old fight among the judges of one of the most coveted prizes in media over a major investigation into Jeffrey Epstein has spilled into view as the story of the late, disgraced financier continues to ripple through American institutions.
Earlier this week, the Pulitzer Board, which presides over the prestigious Columbia University-based awards organization, announced the winners for this yearâs top journalism prizes. But among the awards was an unusual announcement: The Board would be awarding a âspecial citationâ for Miami Herald investigative reporter Julie Brownâs 2018 series,Perversion of Justice, that raised questions about the federal governmentâs prosecution of Epstein, and effectively re-opened the investigation.
The Miami Herald had submitted Brownâs work for a Pulitzer Prize nearly a decade ago when her series was first published. But it did not win an award in 2018 or 2019, a decision that multiple people familiar with the situation said was due to the significant concerns of at least one Pulitzer jurist.
Joseph Sexton, then a ProPublica editor who had previously run the Metro and Sports sections for The New York Times, voiced strong concerns that Brownâs reporting didnât include enough substantially new information to deserve the award, two people familiar with the deliberations that year told Semafor.
Another person, one of the 2019 judges, David Boardman, alluded to the situation in apost on X, saying a âwell-known editorâ had staged a âcampaign from inside the juryâ against Brown receiving the award.
In an email to Semafor, Sexton called Brownâs work âcommendable and consequential.â But he said the âmost explosive elements of her reporting had been previously published, both in news articles and books.â
âI and others on the jury felt the work was not the best entry for a category that greatly values fully novel reporting,â he said. âThe workâs impact on the publicâs appreciation of Jeffrey Epsteinâs crimes and the troubling performances by local and federal authorities was considerable, and I raised the possibility that the entry be moved to another category â public service or explanatory, perhaps. Nothing came of it. The Pulitzer board encourages its juries to engage in both robust debate and its own inquiries into the distinctiveness of all entries. It was a seven-person jury, and the majority vote required to advance Brownâs work as a finalist did not happen.â
While the Pulitzer board often grants citations for broad categories of journalists like those covering the wars in Gaza and Ukraine or to influential journalists posthumously, itâs unusual for the organization to grant citations for relatively recent nominees. Brownâs citation earlier this week was seen by some close watchers of the award as a kind ofcorrective.
Boardmanâs decision to share details about the judging process similarly raised eyebrows in some journalism circles. Pulitzer judges are asked to keep deliberations about the awards private, and debates about the awards process rarely become public.
Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated that Joe Sexton was at The New York Times during the 2018 and 2019 Pulitzers. He was at ProPublica at the time.
Source: Drudge Report