O'Donoghue wins Alaska Press Club award

April 27, 2016

Carla Browning

Brian O’Donoghue, professor of journalism, received the First Amendment Award from the Alaska Press Club for his student-assisted coverage of the innocence claims of four men imprisoned for John Hartman's 1997 murder. His 14-year investigation provided the foundation for the Alaska Innocence Project's litigation seeking exoneration of the Fairbanks Four — Marvin Roberts, Eugene Vent, George Frese and Kevin Pease. In a settlement this December, their convictions were dismissed, all charges were erased and they walked free after 18 years.

Jeff Richardson, a former Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reporter now with UAF Marketing and Communications, won first place in the Best Reporting on Health category for his article, "Road to solving Alaska's alcohol problem filled with roadblocks, challenges." The story was part of Paths to Recovery, a series on Alaska's search for solutions to alcohol abuse.

Diana Campbell, with the Geophysical Institute's public information office, won a second-place award in the Best Culture Reporting category for "Finding Home and Heritage in the Berry Patch," written for the News-Miner.

The awards were announced last week. For a complete list, visit the Alaska Press Club website.