Central High graduate Alissa Zhu wins Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting
Zhu, a 2011 CHS alumna, was part of the team at The Baltimore Banner awarded the Pulitzer Prize for local reporting this week, recognizing their in-depth investigation into the city's deadly opioid crisis.
According to the publication, the reporting project, led by Zhu, revealed that Baltimore has the highest drug overdose rate among large U.S. cities. Their work uncovered a public health emergency that had long been overlooked — one that has taken a disproportionate toll on older Black men and was worsened by inadequate regulation and response from government leaders.
Zhu and her colleagues spent nearly two years sifting through thousands of previously inaccessible public records and conducting on-the-ground reporting in some of Baltimore's hardest-hit communities. Their efforts culminated in a sweeping investigative series that not only exposed systemic failures but is now shaping public policy.
'Less than three years after The Banner's launch, our team is extraordinarily honored to accept the organization's first Pulitzer Prize,' Zhu said in a statement. 'We are even more honored to see the information we brought to light is now helping shape new conversations, policies and programs to tackle overdoses in our city and state.'
The Banner's reporting began with a legal battle for transparency. In 2022, the newsroom sued Maryland's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner after it refused to release complete autopsy records. A judge ruled in the paper's favor earlier this year, opening the door to a deeper understanding of the overdose epidemic's toll.
The Pulitzer Prize committee praised the work as 'a compassionate investigative series that captured the breathtaking dimensions of Baltimore's fentanyl crisis and its disproportionate impact on older Black men.'
Zhu's journey from Central High School in Springfield to the national spotlight is a point of pride for the local community. She studied journalism at Northwestern University and previously reported for the Springfield News-Leader.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Deadly NYC Legionnaires' disease outbreak fueled by negligence, lawsuit says
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USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Deadly NYC Legionnaires' disease outbreak fueled by negligence, lawsuit says
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump has filed lawsuits against two construction companies over what he called a "completely preventable" outbreak of Legionnaires' disease that has killed five people and sickened more than 100 others in New York City. Legionnaires' disease is a severe pneumonia caused by a type of bacteria called Legionella, which grows in warm or hot water, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An outbreak of the disease, which began on July 25, has been clustered across five zip codes in Central Harlem. The city health department said the outbreak is linked to cooling towers, heat exchangers that use fans and water to cool down buildings. On Aug. 14, health officials confirmed that 12 cooling towers at buildings including NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem tested positive for the Legionella bacteria. Crump and other attorneys filed complaints on behalf of two construction workers who were hospitalized with Legionnaire's disease in July after working near the hospital in Harlem, according to a news release. Crump said the legal team has also filed a notice of claim and intend to sue the city as well. "It is believed that the cooling towers at Harlem Hospital were filled with rainwater after several large July storms," the release said. "The water was left untreated, which permitted bacteria to spread causing workers at the site to become sick." Construction companies, city accused of negligence Crump accused Skanska USA Building, Inc., Rising Sun Construction LLC and the city of negligence at a news conference on Aug. 20, announcing the lawsuits. The attorneys said the construction companies were put on notice about the possibility of Legionella bacteria through bulletins after the storms, but failed to take action to keep those working near the hospital safe. "When corporations cut corners, tragedies like this happen. Preventable tragedies, unnecessary tragedies," Crump said. Crump said the lawsuit is seeking not only compensation for the workers but also accountability and answers about why this outbreak occurred in Harlem — a historically Black neighborhood in Upper Manhattan. Skanska and Rising Sun did not immediatedly respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY. When asked about Crump's claims about the source of the outbreak, a spokesperson for the city's health department said the investigation is ongoing. "Molecular testing may help us determine which cooling tower — or cooling towers — were the source of the bacteria in the Central Harlem cluster," spokesperson Chantal Gomez said in a statement. "The Public Health Lab is still determining a match through DNA sequencing and we expect final results soon.' Electrian describes gasping for air while hospitalized with Legionnaire's Nunzio Quinto, a union electrian who worked at a ground-up construction of the NewYork City Public Health Laboratory, a 10-story facility adjacent to the hospital complex, said he thought he had food poisoning when he first started feeling lethargic in late July. Quinto said his family took him to the hospital, where he was immediately diagnosed with Legionnaire's disease. He suffered breathing problems, pain and internal bleeding during a five-day stay in the hospital, but said his coworkers weren't notified of his illness. "I want answers to what's going on. I can't have a safe place to work? This is New York City," Quinto said at the news conference. Contributing: Thao Nguyen
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a day ago
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How does Legionnaires' disease spread? What to know about NYC outbreak
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