Frank W. Griffin and Harry E. Kalodner of The Philadelphia Record, for "their series of articles exposing solicitors for charity funds who diverted to themselves a large part of the money collected by use of the Mayor's name. As a result of the exposé, the Mayor's committee was disbanded and an investigation begun by the District Attorney."
Harry Bloom and J. Howard Henderson of The Louisville Times, for "their exposé of frauds practiced by County Clerk W. G. Stiglitz on the State and on individual motorists in the collection of motor license taxes. Stiglitz resigned his office five hours after this story was published and less than four months later he began a five-year term in the penitentiary."
Walter Duranty of The New York Times, for his series of dispatches on Russia specifically the working out of the Five Year Plan. This award has been controversial because of claims that Duranty lied about the famine in Ukraine. In 1990 and again in 2003, the Pulitzer administrators rejected calls to revoke Duranty's prize.[4][5]