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07/19/07
AP Press Release
Veteran journalist Richard Pienciak named AP's national investigative
editor
NEW YORK -- Richard T. Pienciak, a veteran investigative reporter
and editor, has been appointed to the newly created position
of national investigative editor at The Associated Press.
The appointment was announced July 19 by Kristin Gazlay, deputy
managing editor for national news.
Pienciak, currently the assistant managing editor for investigations
at the New York Daily News, will work with reporters both
in New York and in the AP's domestic bureaus to spearhead
investigative projects.
"Rick is a seasoned investigative journalist, full of
drive, smarts and boundless curiosity," Gazlay said.
"He is sure to help the AP do even greater work."
Under Pienciak's leadership at the Daily News, the investigative
team has won numerous awards for its work, most notably for
its exhaustive series "9/11 Money Trough," which
examined how the $21.4 billion the federal government gave
New York to recover from the Sept. 11 attacks was misspent
and mismanaged.
At the time of the attacks, Pienciak was metro editor of the
Daily News. The newspaper's coverage that day led to its being
a Pulitzer finalist for breaking news reporting. He also worked
with columnist Juan Gonzalez in raising concerns about the
environmental dangers at Ground Zero within weeks of the terrorist
attacks.
Before going to the Daily News, Pienciak had worked at the
AP for 13 years, first joining in 1972 in Newark, N.J., and
later working in the New York City bureau and as a national
writer.
At the AP, Pienciak covered a wide range of stories, including
the Jonestown mass killings in Guyana, the right-to-die case
of Karen Ann Quinlan, the Three Mile Island nuclear accident
in 1979 and the Son of Sam serial murder case.
He joined the Daily News in 1985 as a member of a newly formed
investigative team and later left for six years to pursue
a career writing nonfiction, true-crime books, one of which,
"Murder at 75 Birch," was adapted into a CBS movie
of the week. He returned to the Daily News in 1997 under then-Editor
Pete Hamill as a special writer for the Sunday paper.
Pienciak is a graduate of Rider University in New Jersey with
a bachelor's degree in journalism.
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