Cheryl W. Thompson
Cheryl W. Thompson is an investigative correspondent for NPR.
Prior to joining NPR in January 2019, she spent 22 years at The Washington Post, where she wrote extensively about law enforcement, political corruption and guns, and was a White House correspondent during Barack Obama's first term. Her investigative series that traced the guns used to kill more than 500 police officers in the U.S. earned her an Emmy, a National Headliner, an IRE, a White House News Photographers Association and other awards. In 2015, her reporting found that nearly one person a week died in the U.S. after being Tasered by police. The story was part of a year-long series on police shootings in the U.S. that won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. In 2017, her examination of Howard University Hospital revealed myriad problems with the storied facility, including that it had the highest rate of death lawsuits per bed than the five other D.C. hospitals. Her project published in May 2018 investigated the unsolved serial murders of six black girls in the nation's capital nearly 50 years ago, and won an SPJ DC award for magazine feature writing. She has won numerous other awards, including two Salute to Excellence Awards from the National Association of Black Journalists, and was named NABJ's Educator of the Year in 2017. She was part of the Washington Post team that won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 2002 for Sept. 11.
Thompson is a member of NABJ, teaches investigative reporting as an associate professor at George Washington University and serves as board president of Investigative Reporters and Editors, a 6,100-member organization whose mission is to improve the quality of investigative journalism.
- Man shot dead by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis
- First Black woman to serve in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps after desegregation dies
- Trench collapses have killed hundreds of workers in the U.S. over the last decade
- NPR teams investigate a dangerous problem for construction workers: trench cave-ins
- Ohio prosecutors broke rules to win convictions and got away with it
- In Chicago, handguns turned into high-capacity machine guns fuel deadly violence
- 'Hustle' is Jeremiah Zagar's love letter to basketball fans in Philadelphia
- Lawmakers question Interior Dept.'s awarding of contract to review tribal jail deaths