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06/14/2005

AP's Pauline Arrillaga wins a Livingston Award for Young Journalists

NEW YORK -- Southwest-based National Writer Pauline Arrillaga of The Associated Press is among the winners of the Livingston Awards for Young Journalists. She won the $10,000 prize for local reporting for a journalist under 35 for "Doors to Death,” about the illegal smuggling of human beings, and a deadly tractor-trailer run in Texas.

The winners of the Livingston Awards, the largest all-media, general reporting prizes in the United States, were announced at the presentation ceremony in New York today.

Arrillaga writes frequently about illegal immigrants crossing the border, and about the brutality of smuggling rings that exploit them. In May 2004, in her three-part investigative serial “Doors to Death,” she took readers deep inside the operation of a major human smuggling ring, and chronicled an investigation that led to the longest prison sentences ever handed down in a human smuggling case.

The story is based on meticulous reporting. Arrillaga tracked down survivors of the trip and interviewed them extensively, pressing for every detail. She conducted jailhouse interviews with the two smugglers who drove the truck. She verified the truck’s movements by reviewing records from its Global Positioning System. She dug into the operation of the smuggling ring, and the investigation that brought it down, by interviewing Texas state troopers, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents and prosecutors.

Arrillaga reviewed hundreds of pages of court testimony, depositions and government reports. She viewed police video tape of a crime scene and of interrogations. And she exchanged letters with the leader of the smuggling ring and interviewed him in prison.

Arrillaga joined the AP in 1992 in Dallas as one of 15 college journalists chosen for the news cooperative's national internship program. She quickly moved up through the ranks, covering state politics in Austin, the space program and prison system in Houston and serving as a desk supervisor in Dallas.

In 1995, Arrillaga became correspondent in Harlingen, Texas, where she wrote about immigration, drug trafficking, the growing influence of Hispanics along the Mexico border and other issues. Four years later, she was named Southwest regional writer in Phoenix. In 2002, she was promoted to national writer.

That same year, Arrillaga was awarded the Associated Press Managing Editors' top feature writing prize for her three-part narrative about a Phoenix police officer whose face was burned off in a car explosion and his quest to recover. APME again recognized her in 2004 with an honorable mention in feature writing for a serial narrative examining the widespread smuggling of humans into the country.

Arrillaga's work also has captured writing awards from the Press Club of Dallas and the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors group, which in 1996 presented her with the top AP writing award in that state. Her winning entry told the story of a rescue worker at the Oklahoma City bombing and his failed attempt to save one of the many children who perished there.

Arrillaga graduated with honors from The University of North Texas with a bachelor's degree in journalism.

contact: Jack Stokes, Corporate Communications, 212.621.1720

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