The New England Newspaper & Press Association is proud to highlight the Connecticut journalists honored with A-Mark Prizes for Investigative Journalism at our Fall Leadership Conference on September 26, 2025. These awards celebrate extraordinary reporting that brings accountability, transparency, and reform to the forefront of public life.

The A-Mark Prizes—funded by the A-Mark Foundation, a nonpartisan nonprofit supporting investigative reporting—recognize ambitious, deeply researched journalism that exposes hidden truths, challenges the powerful, and helps audiences better understand the complex issues shaping their communities.

Each year, up to $15,000 is awarded in each of the New England states.

This year’s Connecticut recipients exemplify the purpose of the A-Mark Prizes—courageous, impactful journalism that informs and empowers communities. Please follow the links to read the award-winning work.

Connecticut Winners

🥇 1st Place — $5,000 to the journalists | $2,500 to the outlet
Jenna Carlesso, Dave Altimari, Katy Golvala & Andrew Brown — The Connecticut Mirror
Priced Out
The Connecticut Mirror’s yearlong investigation into the state’s long-term-care insurance industry exposed how soaring rate hikes and lax oversight left thousands of older residents facing financial hardship. Reporters uncovered a pattern of exorbitant premium increases—some exceeding 150%—alongside questionable business practices, executive bonuses tied to price hikes, and political inaction at the Capitol. The team built original data analyses and reviewed more than 700 consumer complaints, revealing how systemic failures have jeopardized care for Connecticut’s aging population. The series sparked widespread public outrage and inspired more than a dozen reform bills aimed at protecting policyholders and increasing accountability within the insurance industry.


🥈 2nd Place — $3,000 to the journalist | $1,500 to the outlet
Marc E. Fitch — CT Inside Investigator
Power Struggle
Senior Investigative Reporter Marc E. Fitch exposed a major power controversy inside Connecticut’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA), revealing that its chairwoman secretly issued thousands of decisions under another official’s name—adding millions to ratepayers’ bills. His reporting uncovered self-investigations, withheld evidence, and backroom political maneuvers surrounding the chair’s reappointment and an attempted last-minute legislative change that would have legalized her actions. The series prompted lawsuits from the state’s largest utilities, legislative scrutiny, and widespread public debate about transparency and accountability in state regulation.


🥉 3rd Place — $2,000 to the journalists | $1,000 to the outlet
Dave Altimari & Ginny Monk — The Connecticut Mirror / ProPublica
On the Hook
This joint investigation by The Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica uncovered how a century-old Connecticut law allowed towing companies to seize and sell thousands of vehicles without owners’ consent—often targeting low-income residents. Reporters revealed that the Department of Motor Vehicles approved these sales with minimal oversight, that cars were routinely undervalued to skirt legal thresholds, and that proceeds from sales were never returned to the state or rightful owners. The team’s data-driven reporting exposed systemic abuse, including a DMV employee profiting from insider deals. Within days of publication, state leaders announced an internal review, and lawmakers passed sweeping reforms to overhaul Connecticut’s towing laws.


These stories represent the very best of Connecticut journalism—fearless investigation, meticulous research, and an unwavering commitment to public service. Congratulations to all of this year’s winners whose work shines a light on the issues that matter most to New England communities.

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