Anna Wolfe

American investigative journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anna Wolfe is an American investigative journalist known for her work covering corruption in Mississippi's restitution centers and the welfare funds scandal. In 2023, Wolfe won the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting.

Early life and education

Wolfe was born in Washington state[1] and grew up in Tacoma.[2] In 2012, she obtained an AA degree from Pierce College (Washington).[1] In that same year, Wolfe moved to Mississippi to attend Mississippi State University (MSU). While at MSU, Wolfe was a staff reporter for the student newspaper – The Reflector.[3] After graduating in 2014 with a BA degree in communication and journalism,[3] she relocated to Jackson.[1] As of 2023, Wolfe was serving on MSU's print and digital journalism advisory board in the journalism department.[3]

Career

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Wolfe is an investigative journalist with Mississippi Today.[4] She and Michelle Liu won the February 2020 Sidney Award and the 2021 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting for their investigation in conjunction with The Marshall Project, of Mississippi's restitution centers.[5][6]

In 2023, Wolfe won a Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, a Livingston Award and a Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting for the second time for her work on The Backchannel[a] series.[5][7][4] Wolfe's series unearthed new evidence about former Mississippi governor Phil Bryant’s role in the Mississippi welfare funds scandal, inspiring multiple court defendants to come forward with allegations against Bryant or publicly insist Bryant be held accountable.[5] The series also exposed key new players in the scandal like former National Football League quarterback Brett Favre, patterns of political nepotism and coercion, and proof that powerful figures kept millions from people who needed it most.[5]

Journalism positions

Awards

Defamation lawsuit

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In May 2023, former Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant gave notice of his intent to sue Deep South Today, doing business as Mississippi Today, and its chief executive officer Margaret White for defamation relative to comments she made at a Knight Foundation conference promoting Anna Wolfe's award-winning Backchannel series.[16] White's comments implied that the former governor misused $77 million in welfare funds and accused him of funneling millions of those welfare dollars to family and friends, even though Bryant had not been charged with any crime.[16][17]

Shortly after Bryant had given notice of his intent to sue, CEO White issued a public apology stating that she misspoke at a recent media conference, that her remarks were not appropriate, and that the former governor had not been charged with any crime.[18] Nevertheless, Bryant proceeded with his civil action (Case: 45CI1:23-cv-00238-JM, Document # 9-2) which was filed in the circuit court of Madison County, Mississippi on July 26, 2023.[16] In the filing, Bryant requested all documents and communications that Anna Wolfe had access to during the writing of her series on the Mississippi welfare scandal.[19]

In July 2024, Mississippi Today requested that the Mississippi Supreme Court reverse a court order requiring the news outlet to turn over Wolfe's welfare scandal documents and the names of her confidential sources to a judge, who would determine if the evidence had relevance to Bryant's defamation case.[17] On December 6, 2024, the Mississippi Supreme Court rejected Mississippi Today's appeal in a 6–2 majority opinion.[20] Mississippi has not enacted shield laws that protect a reporter's privilege.[21]

On April 4, 2025, a circuit court judge in Madison County, Mississippi dismissed Bryant's defamation lawsuit against Mississippi Today stating that Bryant "...had failed to plead any legally viable claims".[22] In response, Bryant vowed to appeal the decision to the Mississippi Supreme Court.[22]

Footnotes

  1. The Backchannel is a five-part series on corruption in Mississippi welfare programs published in Mississippi Today (April 2022).

References

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