Mendoza earned her second Pulitzer Prize in 2016 as part of the AP reporting team, along with
Esther Htusan,
Margie Mason, and
Robin McDowell, that exposed the use of
forced labor in the fishing industry in Southeast Asia and its connections to seafood sales in the United States. This was the AP's first Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in its history. The investigation centered on the tiny
Indonesian island of Benjina, where men from
Myanmar were enslaved, held in cages, and forced to fish. The AP journalists talked to over 40 current and former slaves on the island, used satellites to track a ship that carried slave-processed fish from the island to a port in
Thailand and followed trucks carrying the fish to factories. "We were able to search and find the companies in Thailand that were then shipping to the United States," Mendoza told
PBS NewsHour, "and go to these American seafood distributors to figure out where their fish ends up." The reporters eventually tracked the fish to major retailers in the United States from
Wal-Mart to
Whole Foods. In a
Reddit Ask Me Anything session, Mendoza highlighted the report and noted that "there is more oversight in seafood to protect dolphins than there is to protect humans." The expose by Mendoza and the AP team, titled "Seafood from Slaves," ultimately freed more than 2,000 slave fishermen and led to arrests, ship seizures, and legislation in the U.S. Congress. == Other investigations ==