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For a distinguished example of coverage of significant issues of local or statewide concern, demonstrating originality and community connection, using any available journalistic tool, Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000).

Sarah Conway of City Bureau and Trina Reynolds-Tyler of the Invisible Institute

For their investigative series on missing Black girls and women in Chicago that revealed how systemic racism and police department neglect contributed to the crisis.

Trina Reynolds-Tyler (center) and Sarah Conway (right) accept the 2024 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting from Columbia University Interim President Katrina Armstrong. (David Dini/The Pulitzer Prizes)

Winning Work

Biography

Sarah Conway is the senior reporter at City Bureau, a nonprofit journalism lab where she writes intimate narrative stories rooted in investigative and community engagement reporting. Conway covers the beat of survival, examining how Chicagoans navigate and steward their lives in a complex American city still grappling with decades of segregation and a limited social safety net. In this work, she investigates how the workings of local government and public health crises often collide in issues of inaccessible mental health services, police misconduct and gender-based violence.

Trina Reynolds-Tyler is the data director at the Invisible Institute, a journalist and a native of Chicago’s South Side. She leads Beneath the Surface, a data science project employing machine learning to investigate the intersections of gender-based violence and policing. Reynolds-Tyler works to document how communities are forced to create safety and accountability amid systemic shortcomings from the Chicago Police Department. As a data scientist, she centers the practice of narrative justice in her inquiries.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Local Reporting in 2024:

Jerry Mitchell, Ilyssa Daly, Brian Howey and Nate Rosenfield of Mississippi Today and The New York Times

For their detailed examination of corruption and abuse, including the torturing of suspects, by Mississippi sheriffs and their officers over two decades.

Staff of The Villages Daily Sun

For its comprehensive investigation and moment-by-moment account of Florida officials’ inaction before, during and after Hurricane Ian, the deadliest storm to strike the state since 1935.

The Jury

Carol Hunter(Chair)

Executive Editor, The Des Moines Register

Oseye Boyd

Editor in Chief, Mirror Indy/Free Press Indiana

Adam Ganucheau

Editor in Chief, Mississippi Today

Nic Garcia

Regions Editor, The Texas Tribune

Nita Lelyveld

Managing Editor, Portland Press Herald

Matt Purdy

Editor at Large, The New York Times

Rochell Bishop Sleets

Managing Editor, Newsday

Winners in Local Reporting

Kathleen McGrory and Neil Bedi of the Tampa Bay Times

For resourceful, creative reporting that exposed how a powerful and politically connected sheriff built a secretive intelligence operation that harassed residents and used grades and child welfare records to profile schoolchildren.

Staff of The Baltimore Sun

For illuminating, impactful reporting on a lucrative, undisclosed financial relationship between the city’s mayor and the public hospital system she helped to oversee.

2024 Prize Winners

Staff of Reuters

For an eye-opening series of accountability stories focused on Elon Musk’s automobile and aerospace businesses, stories that displayed remarkable breadth and depth and provoked official probes of his companies’ practices in Europe and the United States.