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Pringle is an investigative reporter at the Los Angeles Times.He has covered stories that include the 2004 California wildfires, corruption in the Service Employees International Union, misspending in Los Angeles's community colleges, corruption in Bell, California, abuses by the Coliseum Commission, drug use by former USC Keck School of Medicine Dean Carmen Puliafito and a subsequent lack of ...
Paul Pringle, Alene Tchekmedyian, Dakota Smith January 14, 2025 at 9:51 PM L.A. firefighters look for hot spots as they prepare for high winds in the burn areas of the Palisades fire on Tuesday ...
Bad City is a behind-the-scenes look at Pringle's investigation into Carmen Puliafito and the consequent exposure of corruption by the University of Southern California (USC), the Pasadena Police Department, and the Los Angeles Times. The book describes his year-long struggle to publish the story of Puliafito's drug-fueled sexual activities.
Paul Pringle's book 'Bad City' revisits the scandal behind the scandal — how 2017's Times leadership allegedly worked to thwart his major USC investigation.
Los Angeles firefighters from Woodland Hills look for hot spots at a home on Toyopa Drive as they prepare for high winds in the Palisades fire zone on Jan. 14. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
In July 2022, Paul Pringle, the reporter who first uncovered and reported the story of Puliafito's activities, published a book entitled Bad City: Peril and Power in the City of Angels. It describes his year-long struggle to get the story published over the objections of his superiors at the Times, who did not want to offend USC. Pringle's ...
She then worked at Court TV for eight years, during which she covered high-profile trials of Michael Jackson, Phil Spector, and Scott Peterson before joining the Los Angeles Times in 2008. [8] Her focus has been on the " celebrity–industrial complex ," the manufacture and exploitation of fame and celebrity in Los Angeles and its vicinity.
The Washington Post has lost about 8% of its readers and the L.A. Times 1.8%. But some argue to stay with the newspapers for their roles in reality checking Donald Trump.