
Jim Haddadin
Investigative EditorJim Haddadin is an editor for The Accountability Project, Connecticut Public's investigative reporting team. He was previously an investigative producer at NBC Boston, and wrote for newspapers in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
His work at NBC received a regional Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio Television Digital News Association, and a pair of Emmy awards from the New England chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. He was also recognized by the Public Media Journalists Association, Society of Professional Journalists, New England Newspaper & Press Association, New Hampshire Press Association and Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists for political coverage, investigative reporting and stories about government transparency. When he's not working, Jim is doing whatever his dog wants.
-
The move follows publication of a video appearing to show a woman placing papers in a ballot box.
-
The city’s police department confirmed Saturday it is investigating “possible misconduct” in connection with the video, which surfaced on social media one day earlier.
-
Artificial intelligence was a major focus at this year’s Computation + Journalism Symposium, which offered a glimpse into AI experiments underway at journalism organizations around the globe, and a window into how they’re grappling with difficult questions of ethics, authorship and transparency.
-
Party members unanimously endorsed the incumbent mayor for another four-year term.
-
A panel of superior court judges denied Ganim's application for reinstatement on Friday. Ganim lost his privilege to practice law back in 2003 when he was convicted on municipal corruption charges.
-
An investigation by The Accountability Project raises familiar questions about the state's system for licensing health care workers and investigating misconduct complaints.
-
Ganim’s lawyer argued at a hearing Tuesday that the mayor has been rehabilitated and sincerely regrets the actions that led to his law license being suspended 20 years ago.
-
Connecticut's health department is working to update its physician profiles after an investigation by The Accountability Project found some information about doctor discipline was missing.
-
Hartford officials have allocated more than $400,000 of a $2M gun violence grant to create Slack channels to help fight crime.
-
The Accountability Project found in a recent investigation that some applicants experienced delays and confusion when applying for leave.