Merriman was an investigative journalist in Cleveland for 14 years. He worked for
WEWS-TV (News 5) from 1995 to 2001, then moved to
WJW-TV (Fox 8) until 2008. In 2002, he reported a story involving the
United States military and prostitution in South Korea. Wearing a hidden camera, he walked into bars and brothels near
Camp Casey, documenting U.S. military police protecting American soldiers who were paying for sex with trafficked women. The report led to Congressional hearings and an investigation by the
Department of Defense Office of Inspector General. Beginning in 2004, Merriman reported on fraud, waste and mismanagement in the
Cleveland Municipal School District's transportation department under the leadership of CEO
Barbara Byrd-Bennett, including inflated ridership figures, school buses being used to run personal errands, and an excessively large number of spare school bus drivers. The series, "School Bus Bloat," won a
duPont-Columbia Silver Baton Award and the I.R.E. Medal from
Investigative Reporters & Editors. In 2006, he was profiled in a PBS documentary, "The Best of Broadcast Journalism." In other stories, Merriman reported on EMS ambulances being tied up on "ridiculous calls" while patients in need had to wait, and donned a disguise to document treatment of the homeless by police and private security forces. == Legal career ==