Kelly began her career at the
Daily Herald and subsequently the
Chicago Reporter. While in Illinois, Kelly hosted a public-affairs show on
WFLD -Channel 32 and a weekly radio show on Chicago Public Media
WBEZ 91.5-FM. Kelly then worked in Washington, DC as an investigative reporter at the
Washington Post, where she became an expert in public records requests and
Freedom of Information Act requests. Kelly is also a visiting lecturer in the Humanities Council and Ferris professor of journalism at
Princeton University. a database that tracked 990 police shootings in 2015. At the time, neither the federal government nor state governments had comprehensive, nationwide data on police killings. Drawing on databases put together by nonprofit groups as well as local newspaper reports, law enforcement websites and social media, Lowery and colleagues built out the Post's Fatal Force database. Kelly was one of 70 staffers from multiple departments assembled the database and compiled stories, photos, data, graphics, and videos about trends revealed by the information. and the
Justice Department announced a pilot program to begin collecting a more comprehensive set of
use-of-force statistics in 2017. Kelly found out about the 2016 win when she was on her honeymoon in
Aruba. She coauthored the first story in the series and did the necessary data analysis of two decades of police prosecutions. Kelly explained that the project "raised greater accountability in how statistics nationally are kept and prompted an overhaul of those efforts. I’m proud that I got to be a part of something that makes a difference." == References ==