Paul Pringle is a Los Angeles Times reporter who specializes in investigating corruption. He won the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting with colleagues Matt Hamilton and Harriet Ryan in 2019, was a finalist in 2009 and a member of reporting teams that won Pulitzer Prizes in 2004 and 2011. Pringle won the George Polk Award in 2008, the same year the Society of Professional Journalists of Greater Los Angeles honored him as a distinguished journalist. In 2012, he shared in Harvard University’s Worth Bingham Prize. Pringle won the California Newspaper Publishers Assn.’s First Amendment Award in 2014 and the University of Florida’s Joseph L. Brechner Award in 2015.
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In Rolling Hills, 35 homes are set to lose gas Monday, then 50 homes are expected to lose electricity by Wednesday.
MLB insiders and experts on sports ethics say the handling of the Ippei Mizuhara affair is a case study in how not to deal with the challenge of illicit betting by players.
Tensions boiled over when findings of misconduct against a top California guard officer were overruled by Washington brass.
An unidentified person suffered critical injuries and two L.A. police officers were hurt when a patrol cruiser collided with a car in Jefferson Park.
A brush fire broke out at Talbert Regional Park in Costa Mesa on Sunday afternoon, charring about seven acres and churning out heavy smoke.
The Post fire by late Sunday had reached nearly 15,000 acres. In Sonoma County, a separate blaze tore through an unknown number of structures.
The charge comes after The Times reported on allegations by Dodger Shohei Ohtani that Ippei Mizuhara engaged in ‘massive theft’ from the ballplayer’s bank account.
Shohei Ohtani and his team allege that ex-interpreter Ippei Mizuhara stole from the Dodgers star’s bank account to cover millions in gambling debt. Unanswered is how the interpreter could have pulled it off without anyone noticing.
Los representantes de la superestrella de los Dodgers Shohei Ohtani acusaron a su intérprete de participar en un “robo masivo†de los fondos del pelotero para realizar apuestas con una casa de apuestas presuntamente ilegal.
Representatives of Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani accused his interpreter of engaging in a ‘massive theft’ of the ballplayer’s funds to place bets with an allegedly illegal bookmaker.