Carroll was an editor at the
Inquirer until 1979, when he left for the
Lexington Herald-Leader, where he was editor and vice-president. During his tenure in Lexington, he spearheaded an investigative series of reports titled "Cheating Our Children," which exposed flaws in Kentucky's public-education system. The newspaper won two awards for the series, which helped lead to the passage of the
Kentucky Education Reform Act of 1990. The ten reporters involved with the series donated the $26,500 in prize money to
Alice Lloyd College in
Pippa Passes, Kentucky, to establish the John S. Carroll Scholarship Fund to aid needy students from
Kentucky's 5th congressional district, which is a part of
Appalachia. In 1985 the newspaper published a series on widespread cheating in the
University of Kentucky basketball program, which
in 1986 won a Pulitzer Prize for its authors, Jeffrey Marx and Michael York. In fall 1988, Carroll took a
sabbatical from the newspaper as a member of the University of Oxford's Visiting Journalist Fellowship Programme (now the
Thomson Reuters Fellowship Programme). In 1991 he became senior vice-president and editor of
The Baltimore Sun, and in 1998, he became a vice-president of the ''Sun's
parent company, Times Mirror. In 2000, Times Mirror, which also owned the Los Angeles Times,'' was purchased by the
Tribune Company. In 2000, after nearly 10 years as editor of the
Sun, Carroll was considering leaving to run Harvard's
Nieman Fellowship program. He had already begun house-hunting in
Cambridge when he was recruited to be editor of the
Los Angeles Times. ==
Los Angeles Times==