“Who has a criminal record?” Kestin recalls asking. He mentioned that several of the inspectors had criminal records. But what the source revealed in an offhand comment went far beyond her expectations. If she were lucky, he might identify a handful of inspectors she could contact. She expected the source to give her details on lax training and oversight. Now was Kestin’s chance to find out more. Though she and O’Matz had learned some details about inspectors’ training, they did not feel they had a solid grasp on that angle of the story. She called and began quizzing him about the contractors’ practices and about what experience he may have had. He left a phone number and asked Kestin to call him he had information for her. One was from a man who said he was familiar with FEMA’s contractor operations. One morning Kestin arrived at her desk and began listening to voicemail messages she had accumulated since leaving work the night before. Pointing out that “no one shut off the pipeline” to Miami-Dade. Demma felt that would make a high-impact addition to the series, so for Sunday, December 5, Kestin wrote an Total hurricane aid to the unscathed county was now a staggering $28.6 million, and the payouts showed no signs of slowing down. Another 3,000 applicants, she learned, had received another $8 million in the eight weeks since the Had proved repeatedly that Hurricane Frances had bypassed the county, and even as high-level government officials had begun demanding investigations into FEMA, the agency nevertheless continued to approve hurricane aid payments to Miami-Dade residents. She had been calling FEMA’s public affairs office for updated aid disbursement figures several times a week, and had included these numbers in each successive story to illustrate the level of ongoing FEMA payments in Miami-Dade. Kestin thought she could get an additional story from earlier reporting she had done. The team chronicled the high-level action their story was generating, all the while actively looking for ways to advance the investigation. “It’s amazing what you can do with a subpoena,” Demma says. By December, Deputy Inspector General Richard Skinner had dispatched seven investigators to work with Florida law enforcement to find perpetrators of fraud he told Kestin and O’Matz that he expected the investigation to result in arrests by the end of the month, but said it was “too soon to tell” the extent of the fraud.Īlthough O’Matz, Kestin, and Maines had gathered considerable data from people in their community and sources FEMA chose to make available, Demma was anxious to get access to the new information the audit would uncover, as it could only enhance the Within days, the reporters’ work brought about concrete results at the very top of the Department of Homeland Security, as its inspector general vowed to launch an audit into FEMA’s performance in Florida. Meanwhile, bargain shoppers can pore over the extensive Classified section, which features a forum for gaining and discarding everything from refrigerators to telephone numbers.’s most detailed look yet at FEMA aid in Miami-Dade, and the latest in a steady stream of increasingly damning articles the team had published. Strengthen billfolds and piggy banks with money-saving offers in the SunPack coupon package, personal-finance information in the Sun Sentinel's Money section, or by fashioning counterfeit currency out of yesterday's paper. Revel in Nostradamus's wrongness on a weekly basis with local, national, and global headlines that prove the world is not filling up with serpents. The Sun Sentinel's staff of experienced journalists has fed eyes and brains of South Florida with news, money tips, and sports stats for a century. Get a steady supply of spider-boppers with today's Groupon: for $10, you get a 13-week subscription to the Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday editions of the Sun Sentinel delivered to your door (a $53.17 value). In addition to being a source of crucial information, newspapers can also be fanned across a coffee table to conceal almond-butter stains or rolled into a handy bopping device to stun tarantulas.
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