CPI's first report, ''America's Frontline Trade Officials'', reported that nearly half of White House trade officials studied over a fifteen-year period became lobbyists for countries or overseas corporations after retirement. According to Lewis, it "prompted a Justice Department ruling, a General Accounting Office report, a Congressional hearing, was cited by four presidential candidates in 1992 and was partly responsible for an executive order in January 1993 by President Clinton, placing a lifetime ban on foreign lobbying by White House trade officials."
CPI Windfalls of War 2003 In 2003, CPI published
Windfalls of War, a report arguing that campaign contributions to
George W. Bush affected the allocation of reconstruction contracts in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Slate ran a piece arguing that due to a statistically insignificant correlation coefficient between campaign donations and winning contracts, "CPI has no evidence to support its allegations."
CPI LobbyWatch 2005 CPI's
LobbyWatch series of reports started with its first reports in 2005. In their January 2005 publication entitled
Pushing Prescriptions, CPI revealed that major pharmaceutical companies were the number one lobbyist in the United States spending $675 million over seven years on lobbying. They continued with this series in 2005 revealing how pharmaceutical companies had contacts even within the Food and Drug Administration and U.S. Trade Representatives.
CPI ''Who's Behind the Financial Meltdown?'' 2009 CPI's report, ''Who's Behind the Financial Meltdown?
, looking at the causes of the 2008 financial crisis, was featured in numerous media outlets, leading Columbia Journalism Review'' to ask, "Why hasn't a newspaper or magazine done this?"
CPI The Climate Change Lobby Explosion 2009 More than 100 newspapers, magazines, wire services and websites cited CPI's report,
The Climate Change Lobby Explosion, an analysis of Senate records showing that the number of climate lobbyists had grown by three hundred percent, numbering four for every Senator.
Tobacco Underground 2010 Tobacco Underground, an ongoing project tracing the global trade in smuggled cigarettes, produced by CPI's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, was honored with the Renner Award for Crime Reporting from Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE), and the Overseas Press Club Award for Best Online International Reporting. The
Tobacco Underground Project was funded by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health. It is a cooperative project between the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and
Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) with journalists in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Romania, Russia and Ukraine. Journalists in Brazil, Belgium, Canada, China, Italy, Paraguay and the UK also participated. that won the Overseas Press Club Award and
Investigative Reporters and Editors's Tom Renner Award for crime reporting.
Sexual Assault on Campus 2010 In 2010, CPI partnered with
National Public Radio to publish "Sexual Assault on Campus", a report which showcases the failures of colleges and government agencies to prevent
sexual assaults and resolve sexual assault cases.
Toxic Clout 2013 The year long investigation by CPI,
Toxic Clout, produced in partnership with the
PBS NewsHour, "unmasked the deep, sometimes hidden, connections entangling the
chemical industry, scientists and regulators, revealing the industry's sway and the public's peril." Investigative journalists examined the work of the then
California Department of Public Health's John Morgan who had been working since 1995, to debunk allegations that
chromium had contributed to the cancer cluster attributed to
Hinkley groundwater contamination. The CPI found glaring weaknesses in Morgan's analysis that challenge the validity of his findings. "In his first study, he dismisses what others see as a genuine cancer cluster in Hinkley. In his latest analysis, he excludes people who were exposed to the worst
contamination."
PBS Newshour broadcast the series which included "EPA Contaminated by Conflict of Interest", "Ouster of Scientist from
EPA Panel Shows Industry Clout", starting in early 2013. CPI published a series of articles including "
Toxic clout: how Washington works (badly)" and "How industry scientists stalled action on
carcinogen."
Secrecy for Sale: offshore accounts 2013 to present In 2013,
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists released the results of a 15-month-long investigation based on 260 gigabytes of data regarding the ownership of secret offshore bank accounts. The data was obtained by
Gerard Ryle as a result of his investigation into the
Firepower scandal. The ICIJ partnered with the
Guardian,
BBC,
Le Monde,
The Washington Post,
SonntagsZeitung,
Süddeutsche Zeitung and
NDR to produce an investigative series on
offshore banking. ICIJ and partnering agencies used the ownership information to report on government corruption across the globe, tax avoidance schemes used by wealthy people, the use of secret offshore accounts in
Ponzi schemes, the active role of major banks in facilitating secrecy for their clients, and the strategies and actors that make these activities possible. In early 2014 the ICIJ revealed as part of their "Offshore Leaks" that relatives of China's political and financial elite were among those using
offshore tax havens to store wealth.
Science for Sale The 2016 series entitled Science for Sale included, the February 8, 2016 article "About Science for Sale", the February 8, 2016 article "Meet the 'rented white coats' who defend toxic chemicals", the February 10, 2016 article "Making a cancer cluster disappear", the February 16, 2016 article "Ford spent $40 million to reshape asbestos science", the February 18, 2016 article "Brokers of
junk science?", and the March 31, 2016 article "Senators seek better conflict disclosures for scientific articles." In this investigative series which was co-published with Vice, journalist revealed how research backed by industry has opened debates on asbestos and arsenic with some of the paid scientists saying that "there are 'safe' levels of asbestos despite statements to the contrary from the World Health Organization and many other august bodies". According to the December 12, 2017 article, Brian Arthur Hampton co-founded two
Falls Church, Virginia-based non-profit organizations: the
Circle of Friends for American Veterans (COFAV)—also known as "American Homeless Veterans"—in 1993 and then the Center for American Homeless Veterans—also known as the "Association for Homeless and Disabled Veterans". During the 2000s, Hampton said he had "hosted more than 100 members of Congress across 196 veterans shelter-themed forums in 46 cities" in rallies for these non-profits. and
CharityWatch. The BBB had advised "consumers to exercise caution when deciding whether to contribute money" to Hampton's non-profit. Outreach Calling collects money for "homeless veterans," "breast cancer survivors", "disabled police officers", and "children with leukemia", among others. involving 30 investigative reporters across the United States, which culminated in a series of articles published in 2019. Specifically, their investigation examined the role of organizations, such as the
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), in the American legislative process through the use of so-called "model bills" or copycat bills. Data journalists, using a "unique-data analysis engine built on hundreds of cloud computers", compared "millions of words of legislation" from the LegiScan service, found that, from 2010 through 2018, legislators have introduced ALEC model bills 2,900 times. Six hundred of these became law. The data identified about 10,000 bills introduced in all American states, that included almost identical language. The investigation called the widespread successful use of these model bills spanning an eight-year period—which the report described as "fill-in-the-blank legislation"—amounts to "perhaps the largest unreported special-interest campaign in American politics." ==Reception==