Published: April 15, 2016

Two reporters have won the 2016 Al Nakkula Award for Police Reporting from the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Media, Communication and Information (CMCI) and the Denver Press Club.

The winners are Ken Armstrong of and T. Christian Miller of . The duo will receive a $2,000 prize and be honored as part of the Denver Press Club’s 22nd Annual Damon Runyon Award banquet on Saturday, April 16, at the Denver Marriott City Center.

Armstrong and Miller won for their piece, “,” jointly published last December by The Marshall Project and ProPublica.

The story is a compelling narrative that details how dogged police work by investigators in Colorado captured a serial rapist and led to the exoneration of a Washington woman who had been wrongfully prosecuted for false reporting of a rape that actually happened.

The two journalists began working on the story independent of one another until their respective nonprofit news organizations agreed to team up on the project.

Other news outlets previously had reported the arrest in Colorado that cleared a Lynnwood, Washington, woman who was bullied into recanting her report of being sexually assaulted by an intruder who broke into her home.Ěý

But Armstrong and Miller displayed the kind of bulldog tenacity for which Al Nakkula, the award’s namesake, was known by digging up previously undisclosed police records, interviewing the woman in Washington, the lead detective in Lynnwood, the serial rapist and others.

The story won praise from victims’ advocates and law enforcement officials who asked permission to use it in police training.

“You and your colleagues have turned a profoundly tragic and grossly incompetentĚýresponse to a rape report into an extraordinary learning opportunity for both criminal justice professionals and ordinary citizens alike,” wrote Jennifer Gentile Long, chief executive officer of AEquitas: The Prosecutors’ Resource on Violence Against Women.

The late Al Nakkula was a legendary police reporter who worked for 46 years at the Rocky Mountain News in Denver.

Tustin Amole, John Ensslin, Tonia Twichell and Kevin Vaughan, former Rocky Mountain News staffers, judged this year’s Nak Award entries.

The award is co-sponsored by the and the . Award winners are invited to speak to classes at the CMCI. For more information visit the .

This year’s Runyon Award banquet also will honor former editor of the New York Times, Jill Abramson.

Contact:
Elizabeth Lock, CU-Boulder media relations, 303-492-3117
elizabeth.lock@colorado.edu

T. Christian Miller

T. Christian Miller

Ken Armstrong

Ken Armstrong

“You and your colleagues have turned a profoundly tragic and grossly incompetent response to a rape report into an extraordinary learning opportunity for both criminal justice professionals and ordinary citizens alike,” wrote Jennifer Gentile Long, chief executive officer of AEquitas: The Prosecutors’ Resource on Violence Against Women.