Education
Sullivan graduated from Lick-Wilmerding High School in San Francisco, California, and the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.
Sullivan graduated from Lick-Wilmerding High School in San Francisco, California, and the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.
She covers crime, punishment and prisons for Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Talk of the Nation and other National Public Radio programs. Sullivan"s work specializes in shedding light on some of the country"s most disadvantaged people. She is one of National Public Radio"s most decorated journalists, with three Peabody Awards two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, and more than a dozen other prestigious national awards.
In 1996, Sullivan and two fellow university seniors expanded a class assignment that ultimately freed four men (Ford Heights Four) who had been wrongfully convicted of a 1978 murder in Chicago"s South Side.
Two were death-row inmates. The case was one of several that led to a moratorium on capital punishment in Illinois.
Before coming to National Public Radio in 2004, Sullivan covered the United States Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and terrorism from the Baltimore Sun"s Washington District of Columbia bureau. In 2008, her series "36 Years of Solitary: Murder, Death and Justice on Angola" earned Sullivan her first Peabody, an Investigative Reporters and Editors award, and a Robert F. Kennedy award for investigative reporting.
The series also brought her a second Gracie Award for American Women in Radio and Television.
In 2010, Sullivan"s three part series Bonding Foreign Profit: Behind the Bail Bond System examined the deep and costly flaws of bail bonding in the United States. In 2011, Sullivan produced a series on the state of foster care for Native American children focusing largely on alleged wrongdoing in the state of South Dakota and garnering her a third Peabody and her second Robert F. Kennedy award for investigative reporting. In May 2015, a federal judge ruled in summary judgment in favor of South Dakota"s tribes finding that the State of South Dakota and its Department of Social Services had "failed to protect Indian parents" fundamental rights.".
The project won a special citation from Investigative Reporters and Editors. Her 2007 news series investigating sexual assault of Native American women won a duPont. lieutenant also won the DART Award for Excellence in coverage of Trauma for outstanding reporting and RTNDA Edward R Murrow Award for Investigative Reporting. The first was for her "Life in Solitary Confinement" for which she also won the 2007 Daniel Schorr Journalism Prize. Also in 2011, Sullivan won her second commendation from Investigative Reporters and Editors for her two-part series examining the origin of the Arizona Bachelor of Science 1070 immigration law.
In addition to her second Peabody and duPont, the series was also honored by the Scripps Howard Foundation, the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University"s John F. Kennedy School of Government and the American Bar Association. On August 9, 2013, National Public Radio"s ombudsman released an extensive analysis of Sullivan"s South Dakota series that concluded the series was "deeply flawed" and "should not have been aired as it was." However, National Public Radio stood by the series and called the ombudsman"s report "unorthodox, the sourcing selective, fact-gathering uneven and the conclusions, subjective or without foundation." Two subsequent reports, one by a coalition of nine Lakota tribes, and another by the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform, reviewed the ombudsman"s report and found the National Public Radio series was sound.